
HOME PAGE
-
KEYNOTES / TRAININGS / WORKSHOPS -
PUBLICATIONS
PRODUCTS
-
CALENDAR
OF EVENTS - A
GAME 4 U
-
PHOTO GALLERY
PHOTOS OF PAST WORKSHOPS AND TRAVELS
CONTACT MIKE -
ABOUT MIKE
Mike Spiller L.T.D.F
(License to
Deliver Fun)
Holiday Games
New Year's Eve Scramble:
Write a bunch of different words on a piece of paper
that have to do with New Year's Eve and scramble the
letters. The person who guesses the most words correctly
wins a prize. Predict the Future: Throughout the party,
present a magazine picture to each table of kids. These
pictures should show something from the past year, such
as a winning football game,
a new toy, a political event, etc. Each table of kids
must make a prediction for the next year, based on the
picture. For example: The Yankees will win the pennant,
Bill Clinton will become a rock star, the president will
be a woman, and so on. Keep providing pictures after
each course for the kids' predictions.
Time
Capsule
Some other fun ideas that will keep the kids busy for
hours until the clock strikes midnight are to have them
create their own time capsule, strike a piņata, make New
Year's resolutions (and guess whose resolutions they
are), decorate cookies, and have a huge indoor treasure
hunt with clues.
Naming
of Candy
For this you need: About 6 different candies that have
given names like M&M's, Crunch, Wrigley's , etc. 1 Die
(or 2 dice if the crowd is very large) Everyone is
seated on the floor in a circle. Packaged candy bars or
candy are placed in the middle of the circle. Everyone
starts by saying their own names. The leader then makes
sure that everyone knows what candy is in the middle.
someone begins by rolling the dice. If they roll a 6,
they can take one of the candies in the middle. The die
continues to go quickly around the circle while people
keep picking up candy. When all of the candies are
taken, people then can get other people's candy. In
order to get their candy, they must state the person's
first name and the name of the candy they hold. The
person who rolls a 6 and matches the name of the candy
and the person takes the other's candy. If they forget
either name, they miss their turn and the dice goes to
the next person and they continue to roll. (One person
can get more than one candy and people can hide the
candy behind their back). This is a great way of getting
to know people's name and how to get your favorite
candies!
Celebrity
Hunt
Everyone writes the name of a celebrity, famous person
or character on a piece of paper which they stick to the
forehead of the player on
their left (use tape or office Post-It notes). Make sure
they don't see the name. List down the activity(s) or
event(s) which has made them famous( but no names).
Paste the paper up on the wall so that every guest can
see it. This will act as cues and give the participants
a direction to make guessing. Now the game starts.
Everyone else can see your forehead. The objective is to
work out who you are. Going around the table, each payer
takes a turn to ask the party questions about who they
are - answers can be YES or NO only. If you get a YES
you may continue asking, if you get a NO play moves on
to the left. Last person to guess their name is the
loser. Simple, but very absorbing.
The
Grouping Game
This is a good game to
play as a mixer. It is a fun, fast moving game. It
starts out as everyone collects in one big group. The
leader initially calls out a number, usually a number
between two and fifteen. The number shouldn't be more
than half of the number of total participants. When the
number is called out everyone must try to collect in a
group that contains that number of people. The group
members should be latching arms or have their arms
wrapped around each other so that the leader can see who
is in the group. If someone cannot enter a group because
the number of required members has been reached, he is
out of the game. As different numbers are successively
called out the number of participants gets smaller and
smaller. Eventually, there are less than ten people. The
last group, or winning group, should have anywhere from
two to five people.
Musical
Chairs
The old favorite. With one fewer chairs than people, a
short snippet of music is played while the people move
around the room. All the chairs are placed in the middle
of the room or arranged in a corner, all facing back on
the wall. When the music stops everyone tries to sit on
a vacant chair. (Only one person per chair) The person
who doesn't find a chair is 'out'. One chair is taken
away and the game continues until only one person (The
Winner) is left.
Pass It On
Sit close together in two lines facing the same
direction. The person in the front of each line rolls a
die. When one of them gets a six, both of them pass a
small object (a jack, a ball, a bracelet) to the person
behind them who passes it on until it reaches the end.
When it gets to the last person, that person must get up
and race to the front of the line with the object and
sit down. The person who sits down first, gets to sit in
the front of the line. The person who was second to sit
down, goes back to his or her spot. Whichever line
rotates from back to front first, wins.
Winking Murder
All except the detective sit in a circle while the
detective waits outside. One person from the circle is
elected to be the murderer, and then the Detective is
called back to stand in the circle. When he is ready,
the Murderer winks at people in the circle. Anyone who
sees that they have been winked at lets out a
blood-curdling scream and dies. The Detective has three
attempts to guess the murderer.
Pass the Orange
Arrange for teams of about 8 to stand in a line, one
behind the other (arranged - boy, girl, boy,...). Give
each team an orange which the first person should tuck
under his chin. This should be passed to the person
behind. When the orange gets to the last person, they
come to the front of the line and start again. The
winning team is the first one which gets their starting
person to the front again.
Guessing
the resolutions
Make each of your guests write down 5 resolutions, each
on its own slip of paper. Pull one slip of paper out of
a basket at a time and read it out loud. Everyone has to
write down who they think made each resolution. At the
end of the readings, the person who guessed the most
correctly wins a prize. Read some of the wrong guesses
out loud for fun!
Word guessing
Write down 100 words on index cards such as stare, grin,
blink, giggle, laugh, plate, shoelace, thread or any
word you like. Stack the cards and put them in the
center of the room. Divide the players into 2 teams and
seat them opposite each other. Set the timer or
stopwatch for one minute. Have the first player from
Team One draw a card from the pile and give clues to the
word to his/her teammates before the timer ends the
play.
So, if the word is "laugh", the team member might say,
"What you do if someone tells you a joke?" Players from
Team One try to guess the word; if they are successful
before the time is up, they get a point. If the timer
runs out and the word is not guessed, the other team
gets a bonus point. Take turns until all the cards are
exhausted, and then add up points to see who wins.
Fun photos
Take the picture of each of your guests with the digital camera.
Have them make a funny face and be sure to tell them
there is a prize for the best face. After all the
pictures have been taken, download them to your computer
or laptop and ask everyone to gather around the monitor.
The winner will be judged on the greatest laughter.
Month guessing
Go through old magazines from the past year, or to your
local library to search through old news articles. Find
the events that took place in the past year. Make a list
of these events, and ask your guests to guess which
month the event took place in. Whoever guesses the most
right wins a prize.
More Games at the bottom of this page
Thanksgiving Day Fun for the Family

#1 - Ask Me Anything
Just how
well do you know that grandma of yours? This easygoing question game
may yield some surprising discoveries.
Instructions
Just how well do you know that grandma of yours? This easy-going question game may yield some surprising discoveries.
Instructions
2.
To Play:
The first player draws a card and reads the question aloud to the
player on his right. The player writes down his answer while the
questioner writes down what he thinks the answer will be. Both
players then read their answers aloud. If they match, the questioner
rolls the dice and moves his piece that number of spaces, then draws
another question to ask another player.
If the answers don't match, the next player draws a question. The
first player to reach the designated end space wins.
# 2 - Just Chillin'
This observational game may get a surprisingly warm welcome from the younger set.
To Play: Nominate someone to be Mr. Freeze. At various points during the meal, that person freezes like a statue. The other players' objective is to notice when this happens and freeze, too. The last person to freeze must perform a forfeit.

#3 - Up Jenkins
(One of my all-time favorite
table games)
A silly sleight-of-hand game is sure to get guests giggling around the table.
Instructions
1. The Setup: Split players into two teams and have the teams sit opposite one another at a table (after the dishes are cleared!). Give one team a coin.
2.
To Play:
The team with the coin passes it among themselves under the table,
minimizing their movements and giving false clues as to its
whereabouts. When someone on the opposing team thinks he knows who
has the coin, he points at that player and shouts "Up, Jenkins!"
The player in question must stand up and show his open hands. If
indeed he holds the coin, the guessing team scores a point and the
coin changes teams. If not, the opposing team gets a point and keeps
the coin. The first team to earn five points wins.
3. Variations: Instead of calling "Up, Jenkins!" the guesser calls either "Slam" or "Sink." If he calls "Slam," the entire passing team must slam their hands on the table, palms down. If he calls "Sink," they must slowly lower their hands to the table, palms down. Either way, their challenge is to conceal the noise of the coin as it hits the table -- a sound that would give away the coin's location.
#4 - Name that Turkey Tune

Your guests won't mind singing for their supper with this musical amusement. Have them take turns crooning familiar songs, replacing all the lyrics with the word gobble. Choose a category for each round (Christmas carols, Beatles tunes, or TV theme songs, for example) and see who among the non-warbling guests can be the first to make out each melody.