Here is our list of 10 fun dinner party games for adults for a memorable night out with friends and family. If you want to make sure that your next dinner party is not just another average event then be sure to include a few games.
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Aim: To describe a person without using their name
Play it with: People who don't want to go to bed
Concentration: 2/5
How to play Everyone has their own rules for this, which tend to evolve and get increasingly elaborate between groups of friends. The basics are: all players write the names of 10 famous people (fictional or real, talented or vacuous celebrities) on strips of paper, fold them up and put them in a communal 'hat' (clean saucepan, empty fruit bowl, etc). In teams or pairs, one player picks out a name and describes the person to their team-mates, without using the person's name. The team must guess as many as possible within a minute, before play passes to the next pair or team. Keep playing for either an equal number of rounds, or until the pot is empty. The team with the most correct names wins.
Variations Veterans will insist on subsequent rounds using the same names, refolded and put back in the pot: first limiting the descriptions to three key words, then one, then a miming round. Some like to amuse themselves by creating a link between all of the 10 names they submit, then at the end of the game challenging other, now very weary, players to work out what the link is.
Top tactic Resist the temptation to show off with obscure facts. Instead, make your decriptions obvious and to the point to make it easier for your team-mates to guess.
Concentration:
Concentration: 5/5
AKA Categories
Aim To remain alert while carrying on clapping
Play it Before the spirits come out
How to play Set up the rhythm by slapping your thighs once, clapping once, then clicking your fingers one hand at a time. This rhythm must continue throughout the game.
When everyone has joined in, set the game in motion by calling out a category on the second click. Without breaking the rhythm, players must in turn call out something from that category on the second click of their fingers. So, if the category is fruit, the game would go: slap, clap, click, banana, slap, clap, click, mango, etc. Anyone stumbling or repeating a previous call is out.
Variations Issue all players with a number. Instead of calling out a category, call two numbers, one on each click. The first must be yours, the second that of the player you want to pass to. Call someone who's out and you join them.
If this person was a ..
Concentration: 3/5
Aim: To analyse your friends by likening them to objects
After Dinner Games Ideas
Play it: To exploit office tensions
How to play One player starts by thinking of a person, either someone known to the group or present in the room. Everyone else then asks questions to find out who it is. Each question must be in the form: 'If this person was an x, what x would they be?' For example: 'If this person was a building, what building would they be?' The Guggenheim, Bilbao might suggest someone wild and eccentric, while if the question is 'What type of outfit .. ?', most people would rather be described as a Chloé evening dress rather than a Primark fluorescent top. The player who guesses correctly thinks up the next person.
Variations Think up famous people rather than mutual friends - but it isn't nearly so bitchy, or so much fun.
Top tactic: Swot up on Jung.
If the thought of braving the miserable weather to over-indulge in pubs and bars is about as cheerful as a post-Christmas cracker joke, here’s some good news. A little of the magic from the current board-game revival has seeped into party games. The resulting titles offer more game for your money than the standard fare thronging the seasonal shelves of stationers and booksellers. They’re just as fun and funny, but offer more variety, challenge and replay value. So they’re ideal for entertaining at home and impressing your guests with something off the beaten track, alongside the exotic wine and obscure cheeses.
Take the Time’s Up family, for example. After building a deck of 40 cards containing famous names, players take 30-second turns to communicate what’s on the card without saying it out loud. In the first round you can use many words, in the second just one word and in the third you have to mime like charades. The twist is that you use the same cards across all three rounds, adding skill and memory to a party classic without losing any of the hilarity.
Alternatively, how about the Dixit group of games? The cards in these titles contain beautifully crafted surrealist pictures. Each round, the active player selects a card and tries to describe it in a sentence. It sounds easy but the catch is that scoring revolves around having some, but not all, of the other players correctly guessing your card. Walking that tight line between obvious clues and subtle ones is tough, especially after you’ve had a few. And the pressure of trying to do it well combined with the bizarre illustrations can lead to some memorable unintended one-liners.
For those sick of the typical trivia quiz, Wits and Wagers should prove an effective cure. It’s got the same type of tedious questions, but instead of winning points for getting the answer right, you get them for successfully betting on who else might. Combining the favourite after-dinner pastimes of gossip and gambling, it’s a taut cheesewire of a game, with everyone wondering what everyone else knows down to the final reveal.
If the standard “cards in a box” party game isn’t your sort of thing, rest assured that there’s a souped-up version of almost every style imaginable. Instead of Jenga, try Bausack in which the geometric blocks are replaced by improbable turrets and obelisks that rise from your table like the spires of the Kremlin. Rather than pulling blocks, you stack them, and the awkwardly shaped pieces you must add to the tottering tower are chosen for you by the opposition. That lends it the delightful social dynamic which can lead to couples going home in separate cars.
After Dinner Games Compendium
Since boards and wooden blocks tend to clutter dining tables, you might prefer something more social. Hobby games in this category are often adaptations of Mafia, also known as Werewolf. In this old title, everyone is assigned a secret role and has to guess who the werewolf is depending on what players get eaten. It’s great fun, filled with tension and that maddening itch of knowing that someone’s bluffing, without being sure who, but it’s a bit long and structured for party play. Modern derivations like The Resistance and One Night Ultimate Werewolf keep things fast and fluid.
Social games are often cheap, but there are lots of great party games you can play for nothing at all. A lesser-known favourite is 1,000 Blank White Cards which requires nothing but blank cards, and contrary to the title, only about 10 per player. The aim of the game is to have the most points when the deck runs out, and that’s the only rule at the beginning. Players then write their own cards, containing their own rules additions, with as much silliness as possible being the order of the day. Best of all, once you’re done, you can keep your favourite cards to seed the deck for the next game, creating a uniquely personal experience.
Finally, if you feel ready to dip a toe into the geeky waters of hobby gaming, check out Space Cadets: Dice Duel. It’s essentially a team game of competing to see who can roll dice as fast as possible. Each player gets assigned a role on board a starship, and needs certain dice combinations to make their station, like helm or weapons, function. And some poor shmuck has to be the engineer, trying to engineer enough order out of the mad melee of shouting and shaking that ensues, to beat the other ship. It’s a game for anyone who ever secretly yearned to live out a Mr Spock fantasy with their friends at a dinner party. I know I have.