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How to play French toast?

Mathilde Olson
Mathilde Olson
2025-06-16 08:50:29
Count answers : 8
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To play French Toast, you have to ask questions in this format: Is it more like X or like Y? where X is my previous answer and Y is the new object you are guessing. You will tell me whether the object you're thinking of is more like X or more like Y. At the beginning of the game, since you have not answered any previous questions, X is French Toast. The person who taught me this game called it French Toast, it's a guessing game. You will think of an object and I have to guess the object. There was no rule on what the first object was, you just started with "Is it a ?" One day the first question was, "Is it French toast?" and the other person went, "OMG YES!" From that day forth, the game was called "French Toast" and tradition stated that your first question must be "Is it French toast?"
Fabian Frami
Fabian Frami
2025-06-03 14:38:47
Count answers : 10
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In each game of French Toast, one player acts as the Toastmaster. They have a Secret Word that you and your friends have to guess. The catch is that the Toastmaster may only communicate by repeating your guesses back to you. Ages 6 and up can play, with 2-10+ players, and the play-time is 5 minutes. French Toast is fast, fun, and perfect for family game nights and long car trips.
Anais Hahn
Anais Hahn
2025-06-03 09:17:15
Count answers : 13
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To play French Toast, you need at least two people to play – but it works with loads more too. One player thinks of a thing and the other players are going to try to guess it. In this game the thing can be anything. The first question of the game is always “is it French Toast?” to which the thinker will reply “no”. Then the second question of the game the guessers make a guess. And the thinker replies with whether the thing they are thinking of is more like the guess or like French Toast. The questioners continue to ask if the item is different things, and try to figure out what it is based on the things it is similar and different to. For younger age groups it can be good to limit it to things you can see, or a theme like ‘an animal’ or ‘something you would find in the park’. For older age groups it can be absolutely anything – real or imaginary, alive or dead, physical things or ideas.