Hen Party Games
1. TOILET PAPER WEDDING DRESS
Divide your guests into two or more teams of at least three people. The teams are given rolls of toilet paper, and each team chooses a 'bride'. Each team is allowed 20 minutes to create a wedding dress on their bride using the toilet paper. When the time is up, vote for the best wedding dress and the funniest, and give prizes to the winners.
2. HANDBAG SCAVENGER HUNT
Divide guests into teams of two or three, giving them a list of slightly unusual items, including a few "why in the world would you carry that in a handbag?" items. Assign points to each item based on the likelihood that someone will have it. (A lipstick carries 10 points, a can opener 90 points). The team with the most points is the winner.
3. TWO TRUTHS AND A LIE
Each guest introduces herself, and tells the group three things about herself; two are true, one is a lie. Guests then write down, or shout out which one they think is a lie.
4. WHO AM I?
Before the party, make a list of famous romantic couples These can be real: Victoria and David Beckham, fictional: Fred and Wilma Flintstone or historic: Antony and Cleopatra. Choose couples that your guests are likely to know. Write each name down separately on name badges and as each guest arrives, put a badge (without showing them) on their back. Their task is to go around the party and ask yes or no questions about their "secret identity." For example, "am I a fictional character?" "Am I a man?" Then, they have to find their "better half". The game ends when everyone has found their partner.
5. HOW WELL DO YOU KNOW THE BRIDE?
Start off this game by asking the bride to leave the room, standing out of sight, but within hearing distance. Ask guests what she was wearing, (colour of her shirt, hair up or down, etc.) then move on to harder questions such as how did the bride and groom meet, what is the bride's favourite colour, etc. The first person to give the most correct answers is the winner.
6. GUESS THE GROOM
Before the party, ask the groom questions about himself and carefully write down his answers. On the evening ask the bride to predict what he said. If the answers match, she gets a prize. If the answers don't match, she has to do a forfeit. Sample questions include, 'His favourite food? Favourite band? Favourite football team?'
7. HOW OLD WAS SHE?
Ask the bride's mother for pictures of her at a variety of ages. Stick them on the wall and hand out sheets of paper to each guest. As they mingle they can guess what age she was in each picture. Give a prize to the person with the most correct answers.
8. TOILET PAPER & STICK
Divide guests into teams and have the teams appoint captains. Give each captain a broomstick or pole and ask them to stand against a wall, holding the pole between their legs. Each of the other team members gets a roll of toilet paper. The aim of the game is for each team member to cross the room to their team's pole with the roll of toilet paper between their legs (no hands!). The first team with all four rolls on its captain's pole is the winner.
9. KISS THE BRIDE'S ASS
Purchase a traditional Pin the Tail on the Donkey game, and stick the picture of the donkey on the wall. Cut out a picture of the groom's face and paste it over the donkey's head. Have a colourful cheap lipstick available and ask blindfolded guests to put on the lipstick, then kiss the donkey's rearend. The person who's lips are the closest is the winner.
10. THE BRIDE'S POEM
Start off by writing a sentence about the bride (or bride and groom) as if it were the first line of a poem, then pass it around the room. Each guest must write down the next line of the poem, following the previous line as logically as possible. Then she folds the sheet of paper over so that the next guest only sees the last line written. When everyone has taken part, the chief bridesmaid reads out the wacky poem.

