1Jenga
Giant Jenga is quickly becoming popular in bars across the U.S. You know the drill — drink, then stack the blocks in a sturdy tower and take turns pulling them out one by one until the whole stack falls.
2Operation
Operation calls for removing designated body parts from the subject, nicknamed "Cavity Sam," without touching the tweezers to the metal edges. If you slip, the result is a loud buzz and Sam's nose lights up. You know, like in conventional surgery.
3Connect 4
Much like Jenga, Connect 4 is popular in drinking establishments— battle your opponents to get four discs in a row horizontally, vertically, or diagonally.
4Yardzee
The object of the game remains the same as it has since 1956 — score points by rolling five dice to make certain combinations. Or in this case, throw the five dice with all your might across the lawn.
5Hungry Hungry Hippos
You may have played Hungry Hungry Hippos as a kid. It was a pretty simple game — all you had to do was hit the hippo, and it would grab a bunch of marbles. Now, you can DIY with a hippo head and some balls, no hitting required!
6Beer Pong
This game has college written all over it. Giant Beer Pong can be played with buckets and tennis balls and set up just like regular beer pong. Watch as host Jimmy Fallon and The Vampire Diaries star Nina Dobrev play a round on The Tonight Show.
7Battleship
Sink your opponent's battleship from behind a real wall, the closest thing to actually being in one. (Not really, but it still looks pretty fun.)
8Rubik's Cube
British puzzle maker and collector Tony Fisher might have made the largest functional Rubik's Cube in the world. It measures 1.56 meters (5'11") on each side, weighs 100 kilos (220 lbs), and can be solved by one person alone. Get your cardio on and satisfy your OCD at the same time!
9Mouse Trap
Someone built a better mousetrap! You might remember playing the game as a kid, but now there's a whole new way to experience it on a gigantic scale. "Fungineer" Mark Perez brought the hand-crafted, 25-ton Rube Goldberg machine to Queens, New York for Maker Faire 2013.
10Chess (With Humans as Pieces)
This human chess game takes place every two years, in even-numbered years, in Marostica, Italy (and has since 1454). It is, however, not a battle between two kings. The Marostica version is a challenge between two brave warriors for the heart and hand of a medieval maiden.
