There’s a lower-overhead version of the LEGO exercise involving pen and paper: person A draws a design on a piece of paper and hands it to person B, who writes instructions for how to reproduce that shape and hands them to person C, who follows them. Then compare A’s output to C’s.
Naturally, this can be done in parallel with N people, all of whom start out as As and end up as Cs.
Of course, this kind of depends on A not knowing what’s coming, since otherwise A just draws a circle or something.
There’s actually an online game called “Doodle or Die” for playing this. It being an online game, however, there are a disgustingly large number of players who break the chain (willfully or non).
I remember that! I think the biggest obstacle to clarity in the game is actually the rarity of artistic skill, not the vagueness of the written descriptions, though.
I’ve played a similar game in person—I think it was Telestrations. You get a word from a stack of cards, and try to draw that word. The next player guesses which word you were trying to draw, and the next player tries to draw that word (and so on). Fun party game.
Except that the aim of telephone pictionary is to produce hilariously incongruous lists of phrases and pictures, and the aim of this game is, well, the opposite.
Erm… posted this in the wrong thread, then “retracted” it -didn’t actually know what that button did. Oh well...
Except that the aim of telephone pictionary is to produce hilariously incongruous lists of phrases and pictures, and the aim of this game is, well, the opposite.
There’s a lower-overhead version of the LEGO exercise involving pen and paper: person A draws a design on a piece of paper and hands it to person B, who writes instructions for how to reproduce that shape and hands them to person C, who follows them. Then compare A’s output to C’s.
Naturally, this can be done in parallel with N people, all of whom start out as As and end up as Cs.
Of course, this kind of depends on A not knowing what’s coming, since otherwise A just draws a circle or something.
This game is particularly fun when chained; A draws, B describes, C draws, D describes, and so on. Then you see how the shape transformed over time.
There’s actually an online game called “Doodle or Die” for playing this. It being an online game, however, there are a disgustingly large number of players who break the chain (willfully or non).
We’ve played this at meetups a few times.
It hammered in the illusion of transparency pretty well. (Puppy Trampoline → Drawing → If you jump on a dog you make it stronger).
I remember that! I think the biggest obstacle to clarity in the game is actually the rarity of artistic skill, not the vagueness of the written descriptions, though.
I’ve played a similar game in person—I think it was Telestrations. You get a word from a stack of cards, and try to draw that word. The next player guesses which word you were trying to draw, and the next player tries to draw that word (and so on). Fun party game.
Except that the aim of telephone pictionary is to produce hilariously incongruous lists of phrases and pictures, and the aim of this game is, well, the opposite.
Erm… posted this in the wrong thread, then “retracted” it -didn’t actually know what that button did. Oh well...
If you reload, you can delete a retracted comment.
retract
This is the party game called “Eat Poop You Cat” (pronounced “I’pupiukat”) or “Telephone Pictionary”.
Except that the aim of telephone pictionary is to produce hilariously incongruous lists of phrases and pictures, and the aim of this game is, well, the opposite.