THE LITTLE BOOK OF DRINKING GAMES
This revised edition copyright © Summersdale Publishers Ltd, 2017
First published in 2003
Second edition published in 2008 as Drinking Games
Third edition published in 2013 as The Little Book of Drinking Games
No part of this book may be reproduced by any means, nor transmitted, nor translated into a machine language, without the written permission of the publishers.
Condition of Sale
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
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West Sussex
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UK
www.summersdale.com
eISBN: 978-1-78685-499-5
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Important Warning:
DRINKING EXCESS ALCOHOL CAN DAMAGE YOUR HEALTH.
The publisher urges care and caution in the pursuit of any of the activities represented in this book. This book is intended for use by adults only. The publisher cannot accept any responsibility for the result of the use or misuse of this book or any loss, injury or damage caused thereby.
Contents
Cover
Title
Copyright
Important Warning
INTRODUCTION
WORLD GAMES
EASY-PEASY GAMES
CARD GAMES
GAMES OF CHANCE
VERBAL GAMES
SILLY GAMES
Introduction
Most of these games have one thing in common: they combine a full glass of booze with making a complete fool of yourself – all the ingredients for a great night, in fact! These games take different formats – cards, chance, verbal, etc. – but the outcome is always the same: players will find themselves laughing hysterically at each other. Each game has a list of what you will need to play – needless to say, you will need alcohol of some sort for all of them.
So gather your friends and crack open your favourite poison: it’s time to play some drinking games!
Drinking Rules
Whenever you are instructed to ‘take a drink’ in this book, you are expected to do so with relative moderation, so make a rule about this before you begin. A good starting point is the ‘two-finger rule’ – where you hold two fingers to your glass and use that as a measure of how much drink to consume each time. This can apply for drinking penalties too.
It’s always fun to add some extra restrictions to keep people on their toes during an evening of silliness. If you break any of the following rules, you must take a drink:
WORLD GAMES
How to Play
You will need:
Three or more players
Difficulty:
You’d better hope your friends think well of you!
Everyone sits in a circle around the room. Going around the circle one at a time, each player asks a ‘most likely’ question. For example, who is most likely to be mistaken for the Queen? Or, who is most likely to be arrested for bad behaviour? On the count of three, everyone points to the person they think best fits the bill. Players take a drink for every person pointing at them. The game continues in this way. Simple but effective!
WHAT’S DRINKING? A MERE PAUSE FROM THINKING!
How to Play
You will need:
Three or more players
A variety of alcohol
Shot glasses
An empty glass bottle
Difficulty:
Spin the Bottle for grown-ups!
Place a bottle in the middle of the table so that it is lying down. This will be used as a spinner. Arrange the shot glasses in a circle around the bottle and fill with a range of different drinks. Each player takes it in turn to spin the bottle and must drink whatever the bottle chooses!
How to Play
You will need:
Three or more players