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How to Play Beer Pong

posted on April 12, 2008 in Beer games

Beer pong is a drinking game of hand-eye (un)coordination that usually requires at least four people to play. Two people will also suffice in an abbreviated game, however, and can provide for even more intense play, but more on this later. You will normally run into a Beer pong game at a party of younger folk who like to drink Beer. The atmosphere will get competitive and often times very noisy after one team has “double-cupped” the other.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. To play a pretty standard game of Beer pong, you will need: 20 party-sized (16-20 oz) plastic cups, red preferably as that is the color that makes the bulls go running; a long table (regulation calls for 8×2′); a ready supply of ping pong balls, paper napkins (or whatever else you might use to dry and/or clean the balls); and Beer, obviously.

Set up 10 cups centered on either end of the table into a triangle, exactly how bowling pins are arranged at the end of an alley: four in the back down to one at the front. Make sure each cups sits flush with the table; otherwise, complaints (otherwise known as “shit-talking”) will arise about your team’s lack of setting a good rack. Evenly pour three ice-cold Beers between the ten cups. Don’t worry depending on how many games you play and how fast the games go, three Beers between you and your partner is plenty!

The game then begins with the toss. Each partner gets a toss for a total of two throws per side. You can choose to bounce the ball into the cup! However, this could result in general derision of the player practicing this style, unless he/she is deadly good at bouncing the ball for a score. You only get one bounce; after that the players on the other (defending side) are entitled to knock the ball away.

At this point in the game, there are many different ways to proceed. One method involves the option for a defending player to blow a ball out of play if the throw rims into a cup, spinning around like a toilet flush. The spinning motion allows for a chance at blowing the ball out of the cup and to deny the player’s attempt. However, this is adding more dirt (i.e. saliva) to an already dirty game. Some like to stem this sanitary issue by having water and napkins on hand to wipe the ball after it has touched the ground or been inside a cup.

My favorite way to play, in fact I live for this, is the aforementioned “double-cup” whereby you and your partner make it into the same cup, thereby affording yourselves each another turn and the dismay of your opponents. Each cup made results in that cup drunk by the defending team. This can be arranged to the discretion of each team, however usually you and your partner will alternate drinking cups. In an abbreviated game of one-on-one “3-cup” you have to drink solo, obviously.

In the standard game re-racks happen when the cups are reduced to 6 and 3: in other words, reforming the triangle. These are not mandatory, at least until the throwing team requests one. The game ends when one side makes all of their opponent’s cups, and as an additional penalty the losing team must drink the contents of their opponent’s remaining cups. Weird things might happen, like someone will accidentally knock their team’s own cups down in the follow through of their shot: what happens next usually is that you lose that cup, but hose rules generally will prevail. Ask your party host.

People get tossed quite well with this game, they have different styles of throwing the ball and taunting their opponents, and generally it is a fun time, unless people take the winning/losing too seriously. When we are drinking and having a fun time, that’s all you need. Though please do remember to have someone sober around to break up fights and drive everyone home.

A.J. Cabalu is an artist and former journalist living in Pasadena, CA. His work can be found at http://2manypasswords.blogspot.com in the form of whimsy.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=A.J._Cabalu

History of Beer Pong

posted on April 6, 2008 in Beer games

Beirut also commonly known as ‘Beer Pong‘ is the most popular drinking game among college students today. Roughly twenty years ago the game emerged into society and caught on like wild fire. Beirut evolved as a “paddle-less” version of Beer Pong, a similar game that used paddles to propel the ping pong instead of throwing the ping pong by hand. According to Wikipedia there are two stories of where Beirut originated from. The first story explains that the game was popularized in 1983 after a student from Lehigh University observed a game at Bucknell University. The other story goes on to say that the game was developed in 1986. This is when a fraternity at Lehigh University created the game after all ping pong paddles were broken for regular Beer Pong. True Beirut .com supports the first story due to extent research in this area and finding many “old timers” who have claimed to play the game before 1986.

Anyhow, the reason the game is called Beirut instead of ‘Beer Pong‘ is because of an interesting history fact. Since the name Beer Pong had already been assigned to the game with paddles, a name for the game without paddles was in need. What ended up coming to these student’s mind oddly enough is the 70’s. To be exact they saw throwing the ping pong balls into the opposite cups symbolizing the “bombings” from East Beirut to West Beirut while they were at war in the 70’s (In Lebanon)

The game of Beirut spread very fast across the nation picking up a bunch of different variations of the game as it went. Although the game is called Beirut, it is often referred to as Beer Pong in many areas. It has been agreed among most people that calling the game Beirut or Beer Pong is acceptable and can be used interchangeably when referring to the game. Tendencies show that more people from the north refer to it as Beirut and more people from the south refer to it either as Beirut or Beer Pong. Simply it is argued that ‘Beer Pong‘ is easier to remember and makes more sense to the novice player. But most serious players call it ‘Beirut‘.

I personally believe the game started in the 70’s but did not get popular until the 80’s and has been spreading ever since. There is now not 1 university or college in the US that does not have a few hardcore Beirut players.

http://www.TrueBeirut.com - Beer Pong history, tips, tricks, strategy, and merchandis


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