Counting-out game

A counting-out game is a simple game intended to select a person to be "it", often for the purpose of playing another game. These games usually require no materials, and are played with spoken words or hand gestures.

Many such games involve one person pointing at each participant in a circle of players while reciting a rhyme. A new person is pointed at as each word is said. The player who is selected at the conclusion of the rhyme is "it" or "out". In an alternate version, the circle of players may each put two feet in and at the conclusion of the rhyme, that player removes one foot and the rhyme starts over with the next person. In this case, the first player that has both feet removed is "it" or "out". These are often accepted as random selections because the number of words has not been calculated beforehand, so the result is unknown right up until someone is selected.

A variant of counting-out game, known as Josephus problem, represents a famous theoretical problem in mathematics and computer science.

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Counting-out games

Several simple games can be played to select one person from a group, either as a straightforward winner, or as someone who is eliminated. Rock, Paper, Scissors and Odd or Even require no materials and are played using hand gestures, although with the former it is possible for a player to win or lose through skill rather than luck. Coin flipping and drawing straws are fair methods of randomly determining a player. Bizz Buzz is a spoken word game where if a player slips up and speaks a word out of sequence, they are eliminated.

Common rhymes

(These rhymes may have many local or regional variants.)

Cape nane nú
Ene tene tú
Saliste tú
En el nombre de Je-sús.
Tarzan, Tarzan
In a tree.
How many gallons did he pee?
(The counter proceeds counting off the number of 'gallons' the person he landed on says.)
Whose shoe is the dirty shoe
Please go out and wash your dirty shoe
And come back to school
By Monday morning
One potato, two potato
Three potato, four,
Five potato, six potato,
Seven potato, more,
One big bad spud.
Ink-a-Dinkado
A bottle of ink
Cork fell out and you stink
My mother told me to pick the very best one and
You are not it
Bubblegum, bubblegum,
In a dish,
How many pieces,
Do you wish?
(Whomever the rhyme ends with chooses a number, and that many "pieces" are counted. The person on whom the last number falls is out.)
One spot, two spot, zig-zag, tear.
Pop-die, pennygot, tennyum, tear.
Harum, scare'em, rip'em, tear'em.
Tay, taw, toe.

This was used in the Marx Brothers film Duck Soup.

Superman, Superman fly away
Superman, Superman save the day
Inky Binky Bonky,
Daddy had a donkey,
Donkey died, daddy cried,
Inky Binky Bonky.
Skunk in the barnyard, PU!
He laid a big one, on you!
[Number] horses in a stable,
One jumps out
(In place of [Number], the number of players currently in is used, changing as the players are taken out.)
My mother and your mother were washing clothes,
My mother punched your mother right in the nose.
What color was her blood?
(The color chosen is spelled out. Whoever gets the last letter is "it".)
swinging from a rubber-band,
slips, falls, breaks his butt,
What colour was his blood?
(The color chosen is spelled out. Whoever gets the last letter is "it".)
Cindereller, dressed in yeller
Went upstairs to kiss her feller
Made a mistake and kissed a snake
Came downstairs with a bellyache
How many doctors did it take?
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8!
(Whoever is #8 is it.)
Scout, Scout
You're out
Pizza pizza pizza pie,
If you eat it you will die,
If you die I will cry,
Pizza pizza pizza pie.
Engine, engine #9
Going down Chicago line
If the train falls off the track,
Do you want your money back?
(The person picked chooses yes or no)
(The "counter" spells out Y-E-S (or N-O))
And you are it!
Ink in the bottle, you stink!
Where did it come from? From you!
When did it happen? Last night!
How did it feel? Just right!

See also

External links