Pong games Beer pong | w/ Paddles Slam | Dartmouth This article or section is not written in the formal tone expected of an encyclopedia article. ... This article or section is not written in the formal tone expected of an encyclopedia article. ... Image File history File links Beer_mug. ... For the similar drinking game involving table tennis paddles, see beer pong (paddles). ... When referring to the game using table tennis paddles, the rules of Beer Pong are relatively close to those of table tennis and thus presumably emerged as an adaptation of table tennis into a drinking game. ... A slam pong player at Dartmouth Colleges Phi Tau Coeducation Fraternity. ... Dartmouth Pong is a drinking game based on ping pong played at Dartmouth College. ...
Table games Flip cup | Boat race Arrogance | Quarters Land Mine | Chandeliers 7-11-Doubles Flip Cup, also known as Flipper, Flippy Cup, Taps, Tippy Cup, Cups, Canoe, Turbos or Turbo Cups, is a team-based drinking game. ... A boat race is a drinking game between (usually) two teams of equal numbers. ... Arrogance (also referred to as 50-50) is a drinking game of chance which can be played with any number of players. ... Quarters is a popular drinking game which involves players bouncing a quarter off of a table in an attempt to have the quarter land, usually into a shotglass (or cup) on that table. ... âMinefieldâ redirects here. ... Chandeliers is a drinking game that is a spinoff of Quarters. ... 7-11-Doubles is drinking game that uses dice. ...
Word games I Never | 21 Drink while you think For other uses, see I Never (disambiguation). ... 21 is a drinking game typically played by players sitting in a circle. ... Coge lo que pienses (known in some quarters as Coge lo que pienses, or Imbibe whilst you cogitate under International Drinking Rules) is a very simple drinking game. ...
Card games Kings | Asshole Hi-Lo | Horserace Connections | Pyramid Fuck the Dealer Kings, Kings Deck, Kings Cup, King of Cups, Circle of Death, Ring of Fire, Waterfall, Sociables or Categories is a popular drinking game similar to Circle of Death. ... Asshole (also popularly known as Dai Hin Min, Presidents and Assholes, President, Scum, Bastard, Presidents and Eejits, Rich man, Poor man, Sheep, Dictator, Gummybears, or Revolution) is a card game for 3 or more in which players race to get rid of all their cards. ... The current, third-generation Hi Lo counter Hi Lo is a pricing game on the American television game show The Price Is Right. ... Horserace is a drinking game in which players place bets on a particular suit of cards, cheer their selected horse on as it races, and drink according to the outcome. ... Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ...
Binge drinking games Keg stand | Power Hour Funneling | Shotgunning Strawpedo | Yard of ale Edward Forty-Hands | Case race Drinking too much beer may qualify as binge-drinking if it leads to at least two days of inebriation and the drinker neglects usual responsibilities The British Medical Association states that there is no consensus on the definition of binge drinking. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Power Hour, also known as Centurion, is a type of drinking game where every player drinks a 1. ... Funneling at a heavy metal festival in Sweden A student demonstrates a beer bong at Carnegie Mellon University. ... Shotgunning is a means of consuming a canned beverage, especially beer, very quickly by a particular technique involving punching a hole in the side of the can. ... This article is about the measurement of beer known as the yard. ... Edward Forty-Hands is a binge drinking game in which a player duct tapes a 40 oz. ... A Case Race is an American Drinking game involving a competition to see which team or individual can finish a case (most commonly a case of beer) first. ...
Connections is a card game that is used for a drinking game. It is preferably played with three (3) or more players. // For the game on The Price Is Right, please see Card Game (pricing game). ... This article or section is not written in the formal tone expected of an encyclopedia article. ...
Rules
All of the cards all delt out face-down evenly to all of the players. Each player has his or her own pile, but may not look at it.
One person starts by turning over his top card.
Then, the second player turns over his first card.
If there is a "connection" between the two (2) cards, such as same suit or face value, each player drinks the face value of his card (Jack=11, Queen=12, King=13, and Ace=14).
The game continues around the circle, where connections can form between any amount of players.[1]
Black's goal is to form a fl path connecting the fl sides of the parallelogram, and White's goal is to form a white path connecting the white sides.
The peculiarity of this game is that the number of squares a man may move in a given direction is determined by counting the number of men of either color along that line of action.
Martin Gardner, "The Game of Hex," Mathematical Puzzles and Diversions, Simon and Schuster, 1963.
About half the book is a catalog of all the connectiongames that have been invented, most in the past 20 years.
Connectiongames are a genre of board games that generally consist of connecting adjacent squares (or hexagons, octagons, circles) together in some manner so as to meet some definition like a line across the board or enclosing an area.
There is a deep description of principal games, like hex, shannon game, Y, trax etc. and a brief descrpition of a lot of other games, all based on the objective of connecting different sides of the board.