Battleship pong drinking game




















Plus it floats, so you can play it right in the water of a pool, lake, or river. You're probably bored with both Hasbro's version of the war game and you tire of the same old Beer pong game. So combine the two and get ready for some fun. This game of naval warfare mixed with drinking can be played on land or at sea. The goal of the company behind this is to deliver a complete battleship experience. Cards Against Humanity One of our personal favorite classic card games that you can easily turn into a drunk board game includes Cards Against Humanity.

Cards Against Humanity is definitely an adult-only game. At the end of every round, the player that has scored the fewest points in that round does a shot of beer. Tipsy Ships is a new twist on the beloved game of beer pong!

Teams face off against each other with 4 different sized ships, for a total of 10 cups per team. Position your ships in any formation at your end of the table. The aim of the Civil War drinking game is to beat the other team! Every player will have six cups that represent their lives. You cannot change the position of the ships after the game begins.

Numbers are hard when you start adding alcohol, which will make this one of the more fun drinking games. Each time someone finishes a stack, everyone else has to take a drink. Each time someone misses playing the card on their home stack, they have to take a drink. If you land in jail — Drink! If you have to mortgage property — Drink! A simpler pencil and paper version of the game has existed since at least World War I.

An immediate hit, by it had turned into the first board game with an electronic sound chip and would eventually spawn a computer game, followed by more sophisticated console video games and even a big-budget feature film flop in In , however, in the Leverett House dormitories at Harvard University, in the self-dubbed Deerhead Suite, named after the taxidermied deer heads hanging on the walls, sophomore Andrew Kreicher simply wanted a more challenging version of the ubiquitous beer pong.

He recalled the game Battleship from childhood and realized a similar peg grid could also be represented by a bunch of Solo cups—some filled with water, others with beer.

He submitted the treatise to College Humor for publication in , the first appearance of the game on the internet. Indeed, by the end of Beer Battleship was slowly developing a grassroots following on college campuses across the Northeast.

As other nascent social media began to emerge, online appearances of Beer Battleship grew in tandem.



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