Drinking games, popularly known as Jiuling in
Chinese, are a popular pastime with a long tradition in China. The games may
include contest games like archery, arrow pitching, chess playing, dicing,
finger guessing and animal betting, and the more elegant literal games for
beaux-esprit and cultured ladies where players do their best to produce fine
literal pieces, such as asking riddles, connecting idioms, composing couplets or
verses, telling stories or jokes, and so on. The following are some examples of
jiuling.
1) Finger Guessing
Two people sit at the same table. Using
one hand, they simultaneously stretch out fingers (several fingers stick out,
while the others are close to the palm) and shout out a number between one and
10. If a player guesses right, and says the total number of fingers extended by
both players, he/she wins. The loser then has to take a drink. If both players
guess right or if both guess wrong, the game continues. If a person accidentally
shouts a number that is less than the number of fingers he/she has stretched,
he/she has to take a drink.
2) "A Little Bee" Game
Chinese have their
own version of the "rock, paper, scissors" game. It is a game for two. First,
the players sing a little verse: "Liangzhi xiao mifeng ya, fei dao huacong zhong
ya, fei ya" (two little bees fly to the flowers, and fly). After singing, each
player imitates either a rock, paper or scissors with his/her hand. The winner
(the one who shows a sign that beats the other player's sign’) must pretend to
slap the other player, while saying "Pya Pya". The loser must pretend to be
slapped while saying "Ah Ah". If both people show the same sign, they pretend to
kiss, while saying "Mua Mua". Of course, this has to be done as quickly as
possible. The first to say the wrong sentence or does the wrong action must take
a drink.
3) Seven
The principle is to avoid saying the "bad" number,
which is seven. People sitting around the table, in succession, say numbers. The
first player says "one", the second says "two", and so on. The person who is
supposed to say "seven" must move directly to "eight". The players go on
counting, avoiding the number "seven", all of its multiples (14, 21 etc.) and
all the numbers including "seven", such as 17, 27, 37 etc. Of course, this gets
harder and harder. The person who accidentally says a forbidden number has to be
punished by taking a drink.
4) Dicing
Dice are rolled and contestants
have to guess the number of spots. Those who make an incorrect guess pay a
forfeit by drinking a cup.
5) Gong Show
With one person beating a
drum or gong, the others sitting around the table will quickly pass a flower
from one to another. When the drummer stops, whoever has the flower will drink
and even give a simple performance.
Chinese drinking tables won't bore
people. These games do not require a great deal of acumen and are thus easy to
learn and play.
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