Difference between revisions of "Trap Street"

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{{gameinfobox
 
{{gameinfobox
 
|title=Trap Street
 
|title=Trap Street
|designer=Holly
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|designer=Holly Gramazio
 
|image=Trapstreet.jpg
 
|image=Trapstreet.jpg
 
|players=Unlimited
 
|players=Unlimited

Revision as of 12:39, 15 July 2008

Trap Street
Trapstreet.jpg
Designer: Holly Gramazio
Year: unknown
Players: Unlimited
Stuff required: A large surface to draw on. Pens. Optionally some small, coloured stickers.
Crew required: One to set up, none during play.
Preparation: Half an hour.
Time required: Depends on number of players and size of map; anywhere from an hour to a week.
Place required: A large dry wall that you can stick things to.
Activities: Drawing, writing, inventing, evaluating.
Exclamation.png
This game's status has not been specified.
Cc-by-nc.png
This game is made available under an Attribution-Noncommercial Creative Commons licence. (What does this mean?)

Fill a map of your city with surprising stories, and try to work out whether other people's stories are true.

Preparation

You'll need lots of small red and green stickers. A really really big sheet of paper, or many not-so-big sheets of paper, or some other surface for people to decorate (for example, the canvases above). Lots of masking tape or some other way of attaching the surface to a wall. Something to draw or create images with: we used sticky-backed felt above, but a couple of decent permanent markers, and a lot of cheap felt-tipped pens, will also work; you will never get these back, and the 12-for-a-pound type work fine, so no point going for anything more extravagant. (You might need to get a few packets.) Some printed copies of the instructions for players.

Stick the sheets of paper (or other surface) on the wall, or onto a table if you don't have a wall. These will be your map. Ideally the map should be big, perhaps big enough that not everyone can reach right to the top; it's been played with nine sheets of A1 paper (torn out of a flip chart) in a 3×3 grid, making a map of around 1.8 by 2.5 metres, which worked well with a group of 100 people who were around for three or four hours. A game with more players or a longer playing time might need a larger map.

Draw a rough map of whatever city you're in on the paper. Copying from a smaller map using grid drawing will probably do fine. You just want to get in the big bodies of water and bridges, a few main roads, perhaps some major parks and very prominent buildings, and the place where you're playing the game; it doesn't have to be too detailed, just enough to let people orient themselves. Try to get it more or less accurate, but a couple of mistakes won't matter.

Once you've drawn the map, put up some instructions for the players (either write these up yourself or download them as a word document here). Some players will miss these if you just stick copies at the side, so it's probably worth sticking one in the middle of the map as well.

Put out the red and green stickers and felt-tipped pens; perhaps use them to add a few landmarks and stories to the map to get other people started.

The first run of Trap Street map, using paper.

Playing

Look at the map, and the stories and landmarks that have already been placed there. Put a green sticker by two of the parts of the map that you think are true, and a red sticker by two of the additions that you think are false.

Now build part of the map yourself: add one true landmark, building, story or street to the map, and one false one. Other people will judge your additions to the map. If the majority of people who judge your lie think it's the truth, or the majority of people who judge your truth think it's a lie, then your trap has worked.

You're welcome to play multiple times; but every time you play you must always judge four things already on the map, and add one true thing and one false thing of your own. You may not judge your own additions.

Variants

You could probably play this board-game-style, on a smaller map with normal pens, taking it in turns to fill in a fact and then all voting.