2. Look at the picture and guess: the host gives the participants a piece of paper with a text prompt on it. Then participants draw pictures on the blackboard or whiteboard according to the pieces of paper and let their teammates guess. (Similarly, give participants pictures or music, let them do actions or draw pictures for teammates to guess) The rule is generally that no text prompts can appear (all pictures count). The guesses of most choices are often encountered.
Revised version: Participants were divided into several groups and arranged in columns. After the last person in each team, the assistant informs the last person of the words to be passed on, and then everyone whispers them to the person in front, and the person in front can't look back. When it reaches the first person, the first person should write words. Then see which group's words are exactly the same as those passed. In the process of transmission, participants can't say other words except words. (A word often changes completely from the first person to the last person, after all, speaking habits, dialects, etc.) There are about 10 people in each group. It is recommended to send two groups at the same time.
3. Some sports: tug-of-war, leapfrog and so on.
4. Guessing game, similar to 2. But guessing and solving puzzles belong to two teams. The riddler should make the riddle solver unable to answer. If you answer. Then the team with the riddle loses one point, and the team with the riddle+1 point. The number of riddles is limited, about 10.
5. Teamwork. It seems that some of them grew up. Like a three-legged race between two people. Dribble relay
There are many, many, but I can't remember the rules.