Difference between revisions of "The Man Who Was Thursday"

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You can't challenge anyone in the ten minutes before the end of the game, and you can't challenge someone straight back if you've lost your card to them (you have to go and challenge someone else first).
 
You can't challenge anyone in the ten minutes before the end of the game, and you can't challenge someone straight back if you've lost your card to them (you have to go and challenge someone else first).
  
When the game ends, Thursday should return to the game organiser and make him or herself known.
+
When the game ends, Thursday should return to the game organiser and make him or herself known. (If Thursday does not make an appearance, then the organiser should gather all Wednesdays and Fridays who are present, and select one at random to be the winner.)
  
 
==Play history==
 
==Play history==
  
 
''The Man Who Was Thursday'' ran at [[Sandpit #4]], which was running with a G K Chesterton theme. The woman who was Thursday spent the last half hour of the game hiding out in a corner of Battersea Arts Centre, and was given a copy of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Man_Who_Was_Thursday the book] as a prize.
 
''The Man Who Was Thursday'' ran at [[Sandpit #4]], which was running with a G K Chesterton theme. The woman who was Thursday spent the last half hour of the game hiding out in a corner of Battersea Arts Centre, and was given a copy of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Man_Who_Was_Thursday the book] as a prize.

Revision as of 13:02, 13 January 2011

The Man Who Was Thursday
Wednesday.jpg
Designer: Kevan Davis and Holly Gramazio
Year: unknown
Players: 53.
Stuff required: A deck of playing cards with stickers, or index cards.
Crew required: One.
Preparation: Depends how much effort you put into the cards.
Time required: Half an hour or more.
Place required: Any ambient background event.
Activities: Chasing, hiding, deduction, ambient.
This is a playable game - it's finished, tested and ready to play.
Cc-by-nc.png
This game is made available under an Attribution-Noncommercial Creative Commons licence. (What does this mean?)

The Central Council of Anarchists is in confusion, and while its members squabble over their exact rank and privilege, the solitary figure of Thursday slips through the crowd.

Setup instructions

Prepare a deck of cards. We used a cheap deck of playing cards with printed labels that also summarised the instructions (as pictured), but you can use index cards with handwritten days, if you're happy that all of the players will understand the rules.

There should be twelve Sunday cards, twelve Monday cards, nine Tuesday cards, five Wednesday cards, one Thursday card, five Friday cards and nine Saturday cards.

Shuffle the cards and hand them out over the course of the evening. This game is designed to be played as an ambient game at a larger event - a reason for strangers to strike up conversations, with occasional flurries of activity as Thursday is spotted, or rumoured to have been spotted.

Player instructions

Each player has a card, with a day of the week on it. One card has Thursday on it, and whoever has the Thursday card when the game ends is the winner.

As you wander around, you can challenge other potential players by asking "Are you Thursday?" - if they are playing, then you both show your cards. If the cards show adjacent days, you must swap them. Otherwise, you both keep your cards and walk away.

You can't challenge anyone in the ten minutes before the end of the game, and you can't challenge someone straight back if you've lost your card to them (you have to go and challenge someone else first).

When the game ends, Thursday should return to the game organiser and make him or herself known. (If Thursday does not make an appearance, then the organiser should gather all Wednesdays and Fridays who are present, and select one at random to be the winner.)

Play history

The Man Who Was Thursday ran at Sandpit #4, which was running with a G K Chesterton theme. The woman who was Thursday spent the last half hour of the game hiding out in a corner of Battersea Arts Centre, and was given a copy of the book as a prize.