What are some good games or activities to do on a hike?
A few friends and I regularly play board games and RPGs together. We are planning a casual hiking and camping trip. We will go by car to the trailhead and hike in with our gear, tent camp overnight, stay one day, and hike out the third day. Part of our plan is to avoid technology during our hike and enjoy nature (cell phones off unless there is an emergency).
During our day of downtime, we'd like to play some games together. A deck of cards is obviously light, easy and fun, but we usually prefer more complex games. We could bring dice for D&D, but we would probably also need the source books and those are a bit heavy (pdfs violate our technology suspension). Most of our other board games are bulky or have small pieces that would be easy to lose in the woods.
What are some good games our group can play and enjoy?
I haven't seen anyone carry more than dice and a rulebook for Yahtzee. Normally it would be riddles or stories or differ …
3y ago
I've been seeing more "pocket games" in recent years. Some are designed to be both small and short (play in the time it …
3y ago
Here are three games you can play on a hike: Sushi Go, Scrabble Cards (best played inside a tent), and Liar's Dice. Enjo …
1y ago
Bring Don't Get Got, which has a very small in-play size. Play it as a meta-game over the whole course of the trip. It e …
1y ago
4 answers
Here are three games you can play on a hike: Sushi Go, Scrabble Cards (best played inside a tent), and Liar's Dice. Enjoy your hike!
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I haven't seen anyone carry more than dice and a rulebook for Yahtzee. Normally it would be riddles or stories or different getting to know people games. Thinks like,
- Two truths and a lie.
- Have everyone write down a unique but not identifiable thing that they experienced and then have that person plus a couple of others tell that story without identifying the original author (one person is telling their story and the others are making stuff up).
- Green Glass Door, certain objects can pass through (trees,apples) and other things can't (forests, oranges) and people have to find the common thread. This one is fun because once a person figures it out instead of telling the answer, they add more examples.
- Identifying birds/plants with a book or from memory.
- Kims Game is easy to do with either the items one brought with or things one can find in nature.
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I've been seeing more "pocket games" in recent years. Some are designed to be both small and short (play in the time it takes for your food to arrive at a restaurant, for example); others are a little longer. Board Game Geek has a user-curated list of pocket games; some of them won't meet your needs but others might. For a trip like yours, I recommend avoiding anything in the Tiny Epic line; those games have lots of small plastic customized pieces (easy to lose, hard to replace). On the other hand, card games like Sushi Go or Point Salad would work so long as you're not concerned about moisture damage to cards. For something with a little more strategy, San Juan is a card game based on Puerto Rico. (You mentioned a deck of playing cards, so I assumed cards would be ok.)
Dice games like Yahtzee (mentioned in another answer) are compact. Roll Through the Ages, an "abstraction" of Advanced Civilization that plays in about half an hour, involves more strategy than games like Point Salad. It uses dice, paper scoring sheets to track progress, and small peg-boards to track resources, but those peg-boards could be replaced with any method of tracking how many of each of six different things you currently have. Dice in different colors would work.
Games like Nine Man Morris, Hnaftafl, and Fox and Geese require small markers and a board. The board doesn't need to be rigid; you can draw or paint the board layouts on cloth. I did this for a gaming event where I needed a lot of copies of these games and needed to be able to pack them easily. For markers, you can use any small plastic "stones", beads, or similar that will stay put without rolling; take some spares, and if you lose a few, no big deal. (Pennies also work.) One possible downside is that these are usually two-player games.
All of the games I've listed are fairly short and not very complex. Complex board games tend to come with lots of stuff, in my experience. Maybe your group could choose one game that's a reasonable compromise of bulk/weight and complexity and, if necessary, distribute the components? A game like Power Grid (choose one board) or Settlers of Catan or Eurorails could probably be managed in this way.
I hope after your trip you'll tell us what worked for you.
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Bring Don't Get Got, which has a very small in-play size. Play it as a meta-game over the whole course of the trip. It even works in the vehicles to and from your trip.
Or if that game turns your group into a paranoid wreck, make a team scavenger hunt, either honor-system or photo.
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