These games are seasonal versions of icebreaker questions and icebreaker activities. You can use these exercises as holiday team building activities , Christmas games to play on Zoom , or at virtual holiday parties. Check out more this or that questions. Check out more would you rather questions. One of the simplest virtual holiday icebreaker activities is to have attendees switch their virtual backgrounds to a personal holiday photo.
For example, a childhood photo, a favorite present, their best-ever Christmas decorations, or their favorite holiday movie. Pro tip: To avoid awkward silences while people search for photos, have come ready with the photo and then take time to talk about it.
Christmas Confessions is a holiday guessing game where players must figure out which statement belongs to which player. At the start of the game, each player writes down one holiday-themed confession. These statements could be misdeeds that would land them on the naughty list, good deeds worthy of the nice list, admissions of strange holiday tastes, or wild or bizarre Christmas stories. Players can submit these tidbits to the host before the party, or privately message them to the host at the start of the activity.
Then, the host picks confessions at random to read aloud, and the other party guests must guess which participant the answer belongs to. Pro tip: To save time, you can tell attendees to come to the party with a response prepared to share. Blackout holiday truth or dare puts a seasonal twist on a classic icebreaker game. The game is best played online during a video call, however, you could adapt the game for play in person as well. All players start off the game with webcams off. Then, a leader reads out a series of questions or dares, and players who are unwilling to participate turn their video off.
The leader then chooses one willing participant to respond to the prompt. You can also have players take turns giving out prompts, or simply play a standard, holiday version of truth or dare. Here is a Truth or Dare generator to use for inspiration. Spontaneous Secret Santa is an improvised version of the beloved Christmas gift exchange. Instead of preparing a present in advance, participants only have minutes to get a gift together.
Simply explain the activity, draw names, give participants time to rummage for presents, and then swap gifts. Part of the fun is seeing what kinds of presents people can put together on the fly. Here is our guide on how to do Secret Santa online. The community tree is a group decorating activity. Each participant arrives at the event with a unique ornament to hang on the tree.
You can turn the exercise into a guessing game by challenging guests to figure out who contributed each ornament, or you can invite participants to say a couple of words about the significance of the ornament when putting it on the tree.
Here are more community building activities for work. Jingle Mingle Bingo is a game that encourages guests to mix and learn facts about each other. Each participant gets a unique Bingo card. To mark squares, players must make conversation with fellow attendees, and mark the box with the name of a fellow partygoer who matches the description. The first few players to get five squares in a row win a prize. For similar activities, check out icebreaker Bingo.
Carols and Carolers is a simple matching game. One one slip of paper, put the name of a famous Christmas song, and on the other slip, write the artist who originally sang or is most known for singing the song.
Then, put the slips into a bowl and have each guest draw a slip. The folks with the songs must pair up with the folks with the correct singer, and will chat for a couple of minutes. Pro tip: If you have an outgoing group, then you can have the duos sing the song together for the group, or choreograph a short dance to the music.
Telephone Charades is a fun holiday icebreaker game for large groups. To set up the game, participants stand in a line facing one direction. The first player in line gets a Christmas-themed clue and acts it out for the next person in line. That second person then taps the person in front of them on the shoulder and acts out the silent prompt for that third player. The game continues until the last person in line must guess the original clue. Here is a charades word generator for your game.
Special snowflakes is a game that breaks the ice by pairing participants up. To prepare this activity, create identical sets of snowflakes. You can make matching snowflakes by folding multiple pieces of paper together before cutting out shapes. Next, give the snowflakes out as folks arrive, and tell guests to find the snowflake shape that matches their own.
You can also give participants talking points to encourage conversations with their snowflake twin. Pro tip: To ensure that each guest gets a match, you may want to make more than two possible matches per pattern, or keep track of which snowflakes you give out to ensure that everybody gets a buddy.
Check out more office Christmas party ideas. Holidays are about togetherness, yet folks sometimes have a hard time starting conversations at seasonal events. Icebreakers are a good way to help folks get more comfortable with each other around the holidays, and can serve as a destresser. You can use these Christmas icebreaker games and questions to kick off holiday meetings, parties, or as team building exercises throughout the month of December.
It is also one of the best Christian icebreakers for kids , as the little ones are familiar since the earliest ages with iconic Biblical figures. Biblical characters, such as Moses holding the Ten Commandments, can be placed on a magnetic board and a scripture attributed to them matched with the character.
Ask group members to identify the character and put the right figure with the quoted scripture. Mix and match a number of characters and scriptures to make the activity varied and fun. Another take off on scripture matching is to provide more prominent scripture passages with a significant word or words left out one within the scripture.
Ask group members to fill in and provide the missing word. This activity can be accomplished more quickly in pairs using a white erase board and access to scriptures with a matching word list for access with the appropriate fill in words. The main takeaway here is that you can adjust the difficulty of this Christian icebreaker to the age group that you work with, its size, and its Biblical studies levels of knowledge.
If you could be part of any miraculous or other happening recorded in Christian history, what would it be and why?
For example, how would you feel if you were in Bethlehem at the time of the birth of Jesus, or in the midst of the parting of the Red Sea or amongst those who were miraculously healed at the Grotto in Lourdes, France in the 19th Century and beyond? What is the first thing that comes to mind when you think of God?
This could be another activity where everyone participates on both an individual and group basis with either writing out the answer on a separate sheet of paper or on a white erase or chalkboard with answers being given in a spontaneous fashion. A twist with this activity would be what was your first thought of God as a child? Who do you think were some of the greatest Christians alive today or from the past? With this question, the answers can span from the time of the New Testament to the 21st Century.
Examples could include great pastors, prophets, theologians, saints, etc. Try to come up with at least ten 10 individuals from the past and present that have had major influences on Christianity and all of its branches. You could research some well-known Christian personalities from other lesser-known countries, such as the ones from Eastern Europe. There are many regions on this globe where Christianity is taken seriously and where you can find a lot of inspirational figures.
In looking at yourself in general, what are three things you really like about yourself? Another twist on this same topic could include what would you change about yourself that would help you become a better Christian? You could also try to do it alone at home when you feel like it so that you can try and be more sincere with yourself than you would normally tend to be surrounded by many people and especially by people you barely even know.
What event, occurrence, or circumstance in your life led you to become a Christian? Was there a major turning point that led to acceptance? This could be either an individual or group activity that would help to put others at ease and to compare answers that might be similar in nature.
Not only that, but you can make the game about anything that might have to do with your faith one way or another. Try, for example, thinking about a job that was described in the Bible, such as carpentry. Members of your group will most likely talk about people who have impacted their lives personally, so it may take longer than other icebreakers.
Tips: This icebreaker can become as creative as you want it to be. Come up with any question that works well with your group. If your group needs to bond more, come up with a few questions that bring deeper answers to the surface.
If your group needs to laugh together, come up with funny questions. Games are a fantastic tool to help the members of your small group bond with one another. Never underestimate the power of laughing with people. Games will quickly create a sense of community within your group. Jump to an icebreaker Personal scavenger hunt My life in pictures You write the question Starburst exchange Chart your life Telephone pictionary Human knot Line up I have never Charades Did you know?
Jenga questions. Description: Have group members take five minutes to find the following items in their wallets or purses: Something that Have each person share the first item. Encourage people to expand on their item and why it fits the topic prompt.
For example, if they have an item that reminds them of a fun time, have them share the memory. Go around again sharing the second item and so on until you have gone through each prompt. Tips: It can be hard to tell how long this icebreaker will take.
Some people will expand on their answers, others will not. If people do not have purses or wallets to look through, ask them to find pictures on their phones that might fit the prompts. Or ask them to recall what is in their wallets or purses if they do not have them physically. Description: Bring a newspaper or magazine and have the group members tear out pictures, articles or anything they think communicates something about themselves.
Each person should share his or her choice and the reason for it with the group. You could use this activity as the basis for a journal collage that people bring to the small group each week.
Tips: This activity works particularly well with girls, but use your judgment as to whether it would work well with your group. This is an icebreaker where people often underestimate the amount of time required. Description: Give each person a 3x5 card.
Pick a topic and ask them to write down questions about that topic that anyone in the group could answer. Pile all the cards face down in the middle of the group and let people draw one. Some topic ideas include jobs, life goals, funny stories, hobbies, family, fears, dating issues, significant relationships and relationship with God.
Go around the room until everyone has had a chance to draw and answer a question. Tips: If there are similar questions written on more than one of the 3x5 cards, have the group come up with a new question on the spot for the person drawing the second one or third, etc. This will keep people engaged in the game and give everyone something to do.
Description: Buy a large bag of Starburst or some other candy and give each person the same amount try Then everyone who has had a birthday party pays you one Starburst. You pay everyone who has not had a party.
Keep playing until everyone has a turn or until someone runs out of Starburst. Obviously, the idea is to end up with the most. Bring more for people to eat during the study too.
Plan on this icebreaker taking minutes, depending on your group size. You can shorten it by not waiting until someone runs out of candy to stop. Feel free to mix up the candy, but since pieces are passing back and forth, people will probably prefer something wrapped.
Description: Give your group members pens and paper. Ask them to draw a line representing the movement of their lives between high times and low ones. Invite people to think back as far as they can and mark significant moments along the line they have drawn. Ask them to consider the high points and low points, moments of inspiration, moments of despair, leveling-off times, and where they are now.
The charts will probably be a mixture of straight, slanted, jagged and curved lines. At the different points of their lines, have people either draw something or write a phrase to represent that season of their life. Ask people to make at least five different points on their chart to represent significant moments in their lives.
Tips: This one may take longer than many other activities. It might be good to have people draw their charts beforehand to bring with them. If people are willing to share honestly, this can be a great activity to help your group bond. Ask your group to share only one to three points on their graphs to save time, or have people share their whole graphs in smaller groups. Description: Each person in the small group receives a piece of computer paper and a pen.
Everyone writes a funny or unusual sentence at the top of their paper. Then, each person hands their piece of paper to the person on their left. Now everyone will have a new piece of paper. Each person draws out a picture of the sentence. They fold the paper so only the picture is seen. The paper gets passed to the left again. This next person will write out a sentence that describes the picture and fold the paper so only the sentence is seen. The game alternates between people drawing and writing out what they see as they continue passing each paper to the left.
The icebreaker ends when each person receives their original paper. Let everyone share their original sentence and the final sentence or picture. Tips: This is a popular icebreaker.
It usually produces lots of laughs as everyone shares their papers at the end of the activity. Plan on this game taking minutes.
Description: Have everyone in your group stand in a circle. This creates a human knot. From here, let the group untangle the knot into a circle again. The icebreaker ends when there is no longer a knot. Tips: Younger people will most likely enjoy this icebreaker more than adults.
The game is fun and challenging and will get the group laughing. This icebreaker is fun with a bigger group of people. Plan on the icebreaker taking minutes. Have everyone write down one interesting fact about themselves on a piece of paper and then have the meeting leader collect all the slips of paper. One by one the leader reads each fact and the group tries to guess whose is being described. Another variation of this game requires each person in the room to tell two stories out loud about themselves and then have everyone guess which story is the truthful one.
Rodda holds a Bachelor of Arts in liberal studies with a concentration in psychology from Point Loma Nazarene University. By: Jane Rodda. Games to Play to Get to Know People. Games for Guests to Introduce Christian Team Building Activities.
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