About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 82. Chapters: Drinking game, Beer pong, Liar's dice, Silent Football, Pennying, Beer die, Kings, Pub crawl, Farkle, Swing Low, Sweet Chariot, Snap-dragon, Tablero da Gucci, Bartok, Pub games, Slam pong, Kottabos, Baseball, Stump, World Series of Beer Pong, Ride the bus, Pennies, Schlafmutze, Zoom schwartz profigliano, Biscuit, Quarters, Beer mile, Bizz buzz, Three Man, Centurion, Icing, Horserace, Dodge beer, Ship, captain, and crew, Power hour, Moose, 21, Pyramid of Fire, Spoof, Flip cup, Never have I ever, Up Jenkins, Indian, Beer can pyramid, Shotgunning, Hammerschlagen, Shoulders, Buffalo, Edward Fortyhands, Jackball, Boat race, Chandeliers, The Barley Mow, Matchbox, Card blowing, Blackout, Avalanche, Kinito, Caps, Fuzzy Duck, Survivor Flip Cup, Beerdarts, Ice luge, Black or Red, Detonator, Kastenlauf, Keg stand, Beer checkers, Goon of Fortune, Waterfall. Excerpt: Beer pong is a drinking game loosely based on ping pong, that involves use of paddles to hit a ping pong ball into obstacles on the opposing side. The origin of beer pong is generally credited to Oscar Wilde, who is thought to have developed the game during his time at the University of Oxford The name "beer pong" also refers to a similar game sometimes called Beirut, in which players throw a ping pong ball by hand at an opponent's cups located across a table. Beer pong in its general form has been traced back to at least the 1950s as a casual attempt to combine the popular activities of drinking and ping pong. By the early 21st century, newspapers frequently attributed the origin of beer pong to Dartmouth College. History professor Jere Daniell '55 stated that he played the game as a student, and Bob Shirley '57 stated that he began playing in 1956. (Shirley suggests that the game began when spectators rested their cups of beer on a table during a ping-pong...