Why Did the Chicken ... ? Rules
On each turn there will be one judge and the rest of the players
will be writers. Pick someone to be the judge for the first turn. Each
player will get to be the judge once.
Create a Question
On your turn as judge, take a Question card and two Noun cards from
the card box. Put the Noun cards to the right of the Question card in
whatever order you prefer, and then read the resulting riddle to the
group. For example, if the Question is "Why is ... better than ..." and
the two Nouns are "an alligator" and "an English teacher", the riddle
can be either "Why is an alligator better than an English teacher?" or
"Why is an English teacher better than an alligator?" Your choice.
Write Down Answers
Next flip over the sand timer. The other players have two minutes
to write down their answers to the riddle. They should put only one
answer per piece of paper but may write as many or as few answers as
they like. Once time runs out, players may finish an answer they have
started writing, but they may not start any others.
Pick Your Favorites
You now get to judge the answers. Select someone else in the group
to read the answers out loud, so that you will not know who submitted
which answer. That player should collect all the answers and mix them
up, then read them. You can ask for repeats as necessary. Choose your
two favorite answers; writers of those answers each win one of the two
Noun cards used in the riddle. If the same person wrote both winning
answers, that person wins both Noun cards. The Noun cards indicate a
player's score. Place the Question card behind the other Question cards
in the card box.
Keep Going
Pass your turn as judge to the next person. Play so that everyone
gets a turn at judging. The person with the most Noun cards at the end
is the winner.
Notes
When it is your turn to judge, feel free to submit your own
answers, just for fun. Naturally you may not vote for your own answers,
even if they are very good.
When judging answers, it usually helps to split the answers into
"maybe" and "no" piles as they are read, and then reread the "maybe"
pile until you get down to two answers.
If two or more people submit the exact same answer, and the judge
picks it, take out extra Noun cards and give one to each player.
Although more than one person may have scored for the same answer, it
still counts as only one winner. The judge must pick a different answer
as the second winner.