TLDR; What are some good party games that encourage getting to know each other and are not centered around drinking?

A year ago I had a great party. I split all participants (maybe 16 people) into 4 teams and made a 3 game tournament which was very appreciated. This year I am hoping to replicate the good vibe we had, but I want new games.

I am now asking you; What are some good party games?

Criterias:

  • Low or no amount of randomness (to keep things competitive)
  • Reasonably easy to acquire the materials for
  • Possible to do as a team
  • Encourages interaction, either within the team, between teams or both
  • Should not be centered around drinking
  • 🔰Hurling⚜️Durling🔱@lemmy.world
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    19 minutes ago

    Mario Party

    Wii Sports

    Taboo

    You don’t know Jack

    Pictionary

    Jackbox party pack

    Edit: I would say Nightmare, but it isn’t made any more, but back when VHS was the thing, me and my friends would have a blast playing this, specially if girls where there.

  • johannesvanderwhales@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Randomness is often desirable in party games because otherwise it’s usually a small number of people who are competitive and the rest are bored/quit.

  • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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    7 hours ago

    There’s this old game I was taught to play at Christmas called wet biscuit.

    Essentially everyone sits in a circle around a cup of water and people take turns adding coasters under it, until the glass eventually spills

  • crapwittyname@lemm.ee
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    18 hours ago

    Times up!

    Needs at least 4 people, a pen and paper and a bowl/hat. And a stopwatch.
    Tear the paper so you have about 25-35 pieces of similar size, then give these out to the players. Everyone writes down a famou name on each of their pieces of paper. Shuffle them up in the bowl. Divide into teams. Set stopwatch for 1 minute.
    Round 1: one member of the first team describes the name on the paper without using any of the words written on the paper. The team gets to keep the paper if it’s correctly guessed. After a minute, play passes to the next team with a reduced number of papers in the bowl. This continues until all names have been guessed. Count the number of pieces of paper kept by each team and make a note. Return the papers to the bowl.
    Round 2: same as round one, but the describer can now only use one word. No miming, no eye signals, one. Word.
    Round 3: same as the previous rounds but the describer must stay absolutely silent and can only mime. The team that scored the most over 3 rounds wins.

    I’ve played this with strangers and with friends and family alike and it’s always fun.

    • rothaine@beehaw.org
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      5 hours ago

      No miming, no eye signals, one. Word.

      Oh interesting, we always allow miming in Round 2. It’s a good way to “prime” your teammates for Round 3…but I could see why that’d be undesirable

      • crapwittyname@lemm.ee
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        8 hours ago

        I googled your comment and found the game Monikers which I’d never heard of. I honestly think the DIY version must be better, since there’s always someone who’s responsible for the name. That makes it us so much better as a bonding experience! It’s also good across cultures because the people from culture a will know the answers from culture a and the same for culture b, c etc. and it then becomes a natural exchange

        • FurtiveFugitive@lemm.ee
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          5 hours ago

          I agree there are benefits to the diy version. Most published party games are based off some home version that’s long existed already. And on that note, most party games can be recreated as home versions without buying the experience.

          • crapwittyname@lemm.ee
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            7 hours ago

            most pussy games can be recreated as home versions without buying the experience.

            Tell that to my local sex worker, amirite.

            (I’m guessing typo?)

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    21 hours ago

    The key is low effort social engagement

    • Person do thing
    • Two rooms and a boom
    • charades

    Some things are good with groups, but require a little more commitment:

    • One night ultimate werewolf
    • Avalon
    • code names
    • Martin@lemmy.ml
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      8 hours ago

      Plus one for werewolves, a lot of fun and because of the debating element you get to see people getting creative, evasive, their ability to lie and what not

    • Evotech@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      One night is really fun, this summer I successfully ran it with a group of 12. Non gamers, But I wouldn’t say it’s a party game, but in a pregame for sure with the right group.

      The phone app really helps in getting a group quickly into the game.

  • bbbbbbbbbbb@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    The Jackbox Party Packs are good for groups up to 8. Sometimes 10, sometimes 6, its game to game dependant.

    “Werewolf” type games can be expanded to larger groups, its a social deduction and bluffing game where players are slowly eliminated and in turn vote out other players they deem the hidden enemy

  • TheTechyHobbit@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    TLDR; Use poker decks to clone 3 sets of Love Letter

    I’ll recommend some boardgames.

    Once you go over 7-8 players, the options are greatly reduced. The available genres become (mostly) limited to social deduction

    Social deduction, all about trying to figure out other peoples cards. And lying, lots of lying.

    • Love letter, 6 players, 20 cards, ~13 tokens, for points
    • Avalon, 7-10 players, ~30cards, tracking mat/paper
    • Secret Hitler, 7-10 players, ~30 cards, tracking mat/paper, has a print-at-home version.
    • Ultimate werewolf/vampire/etc, ~10-12 players, ~13-15 cards, phone app (for narration, free)

    *None of the above are very good for playing as teams (i.e. two ppl taking a single player spot)

    Group Games games that do well with teams

    • Codenames, various versions.
    • Forbidden Island/Dessert/Sky - co-op game for various number of players

    As a special mention, Challengers is a board game that allows you to create simple yet fun card drafting tournaments. There are two editions, each allows you up to 8 players, and if you have both they can be combined into 16ppl tournaments

    For your numbers, you’d need to buy 2-3 copies of the same game. Not ideal, even if you have the budget.

    I’d say, print yourself three copies of Love Letters, you can find the cards online, or just play with 2-3 poker decks. Its the best game in my library, simple yet deep. We’ve been playing it at least once a week for 3 years now. I’ve even managed to play once with a mob of disinterested teens ;)

  • edric@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    The one where you stick a piece of paper on your forehead you have to guess what is written by asking yes/no questions to someone sitting in front of you.

  • MrsDoyle@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Card games. We used to have card nights every week back in the 70s. One of the most fun games was something called Racing Demon. Each player has a full pack and all play at the same time. We would have 15 people sitting on the floor in a circle, all screaming. It gets CRAZY. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nerts There are hundreds of card games, with a huge range of skill required. There are a lot of trick-taking games similar to bridge where you play with a partner - euchre, whist, 500. All you need is a few packs of playing cards. (Everyone brought their own pack for Racing Demon, lol.)

    • papertowels@lemmy.one
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      1 day ago

      I played so much nerts in college. I was terrible at it due to the frenetic rate of play, but it was fun. It’s the reason I have like 8 packs of playing cards haha.

    • Ragdoll X@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I second the Nerts recommendation because when I was a teen I played Ligretto (Basically just a branded Nerts) at one party and we all had a blast. To this day I wish I had the opportunity to play it again, but I’m not a party guy nor do I have that many decks of cards so /shrug