

You can connect two possible ways: by suit (hearts, diamonds, etc.) or by card number (a two and a two, or a jack and a jack, etc.). If there's a connection, both players have to drink for the number of seconds that's on the highest card. Whoever's sitting next to the dealer flips one card over, then the next person flips theirs. We call it Connections! You simply gather around a table with a deck of cards, and evenly distribute the deck between the players, all cards face-down. Connections, the card-based drinking game with no real strategy but plenty of fun.and booze. You just go in a circle until the end of the song, but some of the times are much longer than others.ġ2. One person starts drinking the first time they sing "THUNDER" and has to keep drinking until "thunder" or "thunderstruck" is said again. You play the song "Thunderstruck" by AC/DC.

You can’t be too greedy in the beginning but you don’t want to have to manically gulp drink towards the end either! The last minute or so of that song is just Sting repeatedly singing “Roxanne, put on the red light,” which makes for a hilarious final sprint of frenzied people jumping up and down in a desperate attempt to keep up with the song. The goal is to finish your bottle exactly when the song ends, not before, and to not have anything left over at the end. That is the only time you’re allowed to take a swig from your bottle. One team has to stand up, take a sip from their bottle and sit down every time Sting sings “Roxanne,” and the other team does the same when he sings “red light”. Now, put on the '80s classic "Roxanne" by the Police. Everyone has a same-sized bottle of drink - beer, cider, wine cooler, or whatever each person fancies for themselves. Roxanne is a great drinking game for a group of people. Roxanne and Thunderstruck, two games where you get to listen to ~classic~ songs and also (you know what's coming).drink. Still confused? This video and this video will help.ġ1. And if you're bouncing and accidentally make a cup in the center of the table, you have to drink that cup, stack it on top of your previous cup, and keep bouncing. If a player makes their bounce on their first try, they can pass their cup to ANYONE at the table who isn't bouncing. As the cups pile up, you're shooting on the large stack. That person then has to stop bouncing, pass the stacked cups to the right (with their ball), pick up a new cup, drink it, and proceed to bounce the ball into the cup. When you make it into the cup while the person to your right is still bouncing, you stack your cup on top of their cup (and give them your ball). Once they make their cup, they pass the cup and ball to the person on their right, who has to bounce the ball into the empty cup. They set the cup in front of them, and bounce their ball into the cup. The (random) two people that start the game are given one empty cup and one ping-pong ball each. We sometimes did the middle cup as a shot or a mix of whatever liquors we used - that's the final cup. Setup: Fill all but two cups to beer-pong level and organize the cups into one circular bunch, centered in the middle of the table. There's no limit to how many people can play, but it needs at least five to be fun. It's the same materials as flip cup/beer pong: plenty of Solo cups, two ping-pong balls, and a table. It was always a riot but not many people seem to know it.

Stack Cup/Slam, another beer pong knockoff that gets more challenging (and hilarious) as it goes.
