Bang, You’re Dead!
A lateral thinking exercise which underscores that “truth is obvious to those who know it.”
At A Glance
The leader points to one person sitting among many others in a group and says “Bang, you’re dead.” The group must then identify who has actually been eliminated and how this occured.
- A comfortable, open space
- Minimum of 8 people
- 5 – 15 minutes
What To Do
This is one of those classic “what’s the key?” exercises in which the leader subtly does something while distracting their group with something else, with a view that over time, the group will gradually catch on.
I suggest you start by sitting roughly in a circle (but it’s not critical), and then point your finger to anyone in the group and say “BANG, you’re dead!”
Extra style points are awarded if you elongate the words as you wag your finger about aimlessly, such as “BANG, yooooouuuurr…”, then sharply focus your finger on one person with a rousing “… dead!”
After some moments have passed, ask your group to nominate who it is you unceremoniously eliminated. As you may have guessed, it has nothing to do with who is pointed at – the key I often use is that the deceased will always be the first person to speak after you have said the word “dead.” So, listen carefully.
To this end, it’s a good idea to allow some time to elapse (and therefore provide a space for a number of people to speak up – they always do) before you reveal who it is you took out.
Variations
- For those working in a zero-tolerance environment, substitute the leader’s words with “Surprise” or any other useful sounding word(s).
- Rather than point, sit with your legs crossed (or uncrossed), making sure that your right (or left) foot is pointing to a particular individual (the dead person). So for each round, you adjust your sitting (foot) position, say the magic words, and then sift through the various guesses until the deceased is identified correctly.
- As in all ‘what’s the key?’ variations, invite those members of the group who think they have it, to have a go.
Adapted from ‘What’s The Key?’ taken from ‘No Props: Great Games with No Equipment.’
If you know of a cool variation to this exercise, please add a comment…
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