Fingers (game)

Fingers

Photo of a typical fingers game.
Origin Wolverhampton, England (2011)
Alternative names Finger Blaster, Finger It, Finger Bang, The Finger Game, Scoff
Type Drinking
Players 2+
Age range 18+
Play Clockwise
Playing time 2-10 minutes
invented by Patrick Sutton

Fingers is a drinking game or party game where players guess the number of participating players who will keep their finger on "the cup" at the end of a countdown. Invented by Patrick Sutton in Wolverhampton (2011). A correct guess eliminates the player from the game and ensures they will not have to drink the cup. The last person in the game loses and must consume the cup contents. The cup could be a pint glass, pitcher, or other vessel (large enough for all players to put one finger on the rim) that is filled with a sip or small sample of all players' own beverage prior to the start of the game.[1]

Rules and setup

Equipment

Setup and common rules

Fingers starts by a participant offering his empty or almost empty pint glass, pitcher, or other vessel to be used as "the cup." Popular in circles where the game us called "Scoff", the game starts with someone yelling "Scoff!" followed by players assembling around the cup. Each player pours a small amount of their own beverage into "the cup". The game progresses in a series of turns with the first turn going to the game participant who suggested playing the game. Each turn starts with all players putting one finger on the rim of the cup. When all fingers are on the rim, the player whose turn it is announces, "three - two - one" followed by a number. The number is the player's guess at how many fingers will remain on the cup. All participating players, including the player whose turn it is, have the option to keep their finger on the cup or to remove it from the cup after the "three - two - one" count. A correct guess eliminates the player from the game (a win), an incorrect guess keeps the player active in the game. The game progresses clockwise as each player takes their turn. The game ends when only one person remains- the loser. The loser must drink the contents of the cup. If the game is played again, a second round, the loser is the first to start the game.[2]

Variations and other rules

Two man fingers

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.