Drinking Dizzy Bat

Drinking Dizzy Bat is drinking game in which the participant chugs a full beer out of the holding end of a wiffle ball bat.[1] While the person is chugging, the surrounding participants count off in seconds how long it takes for the person to finish the full beer. Then the participant must lean over and spin around with their forehead placed on the end of the bat for however long it took to finish chugging. When the participant has finished spinning, another person tosses up the empty beer can and the participant must hit the can with the wiffle ball bat. If the participant misses the can, they must spin an additional three times and try again to hit it again.

Venues

Drinking Dizzy bat is commonly played at parties, colleges and universities, bars and other drinking festivities such as tailgating or sporting events. It's commonly played by the Money team in PA.

Game Variants

"Drinking Team Dizzy Bat" is a variation of the simpler dizzy bat drinking game, in which there are two even teams with two bats competing against each other in a relay race, with the bats acting as the baton. Each team splits into two even groups facing each other about fifteen yards apart with both bats starting on the same side. Instead of the participants drinking a full beer from the inside of the wiffle ball bat, they must drink a full beer(can, cup, or bottle) then spin around ten times and run over to their other group passing the bat to next player. Whichever team finishes first is the games winner.

"Austin Variant" There is a new variant appearing on the east coast being seen over the 2016 Spring Break season that involves the loser being beaten heavily by the wiffle bat.

See also

References

  1. Applebaum, Ben; DiSorbo, Dan (2012-07-11). The Book of Beer Awesomeness: A Champion's Guide to Party Skills, Amazing Beer Activities, and More Than Forty Drinking Games. Chronicle Books. pp. 193–. ISBN 9781452105017. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.