60+ Father’s Day Party Games & BBQ Drinking Games for Adults (2026)
Father’s Day is Dad’s one day to be king of the castle—or more accurately, king of the grill, ruler of the remote, and reigning champion of terrible jokes. Whether you’re throwing a backyard BBQ, a poker night, or just trying to make the old man feel appreciated without getting too sentimental, these games deliver.
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From grilling competitions that settle who REALLY makes the best burger to dad joke battles that prove the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, we’ve got 60+ ways to make his day legendary. Because Dad doesn’t want another tie. He wants cold beer, good company, and a legitimate excuse to show everyone why his grilling technique is superior.
What you’ll find: BBQ drinking games, grilling competitions, dad joke showdowns, sports-themed challenges, poker and card games, lawn game tournaments, dad trivia, and chill backyard activities. Something for every Dad—whether he’s competitive, laid-back, or somewhere in between.
🍺 BBQ Drinking Games
Because nothing pairs better with grilled meat than cold drinks and competitive nonsense. These games keep the party flowing while Dad tends his kingdom (the grill).
1. BBQ Bingo
Players: 4+ | Drinks: Beer, seltzers
Create bingo cards with BBQ party staples: “Someone says ‘needs more seasoning,’” “Dad checks meat temperature three times,” “Someone burns something,” “Beer gets knocked over,” “Unsolicited grilling advice given.”
Rules: Mark your square and take a sip when it happens. First to bingo finishes their drink. Blackout means you’re on dish duty (or another drink).
2. Grill Master Drinking Rules
Players: Any | Drinks: Whatever’s cold
Running rules throughout the cookout. Drink when: someone asks “is it done yet?”, the grill flares up, someone mentions their “secret ingredient,” charcoal vs. gas debate starts, anyone says “my dad used to…”
Bonus sip: Every time Dad says he doesn’t need a thermometer, he can “just tell.”
3. Cooler Roulette
Players: 4+ | Drinks: Mixed cooler
💰 Dares hit different when there’s money on the line.
Xdares locks in dares with escrowed stakes, timed commitments, and video proof. No empty threats.
Fill a cooler with various drinks—good beers, cheap beers, seltzers, mystery cans. Blindfolded players reach in and must drink whatever they grab. Reactions are half the entertainment.
Variation: One can is non-alcoholic. Whoever gets it becomes the designated grill assistant.
4. Flip Cup: BBQ Edition
Players: 6+ (teams) | Drinks: Beer
Classic Flip Cup with BBQ stakes. Losing team handles a grill task: flipping burgers, checking coals, refilling condiments. Winners supervise from lawn chairs.
Tournament style: Run a bracket. Final losers clean the grill at the end of the party.
5. Smoke Signal
Players: Any | Drinks: Beer
Every time smoke from the grill makes someone’s eyes water or triggers a cough, they drink. Every time smoke changes direction to follow the same person (we all have that friend), group drinks in solidarity.
Pro tip: Position the lightweight drinker downwind for maximum effect.
6. The Temperature Check
Players: 3+ | Drinks: Any
Everyone guesses the internal temperature of the meat before Dad checks it. Closest guess is safe. Everyone else drinks the difference in degrees (capped at 10 sips). Exact guess? Everyone else finishes their drink.
Warning: This game can escalate quickly with multiple meats.
7. Condiment Chaos
Players: 4+ | Drinks: Beer
Set up condiments in a row. Someone calls out a burger order (ketchup, mustard, pickles, onions). Players race to build it. Slowest builder drinks. Wrong order? Double drinks. Dropped ingredient? Finish your beer.
Expert mode: Blindfolded assembly.
🔥 Grilling Competitions
Let the grill masters prove their worth. These competitions add stakes to the cookout and finally answer who makes the best [insert food here].
8. Burger Battle Royale
Players: 2-6 grill masters | Judges: Everyone else
Each competitor makes their signature burger. Blind taste test judging. Categories: overall taste, creativity, presentation, “would order at a restaurant” factor.
Stakes: Winner gets the ceremonial spatula. Loser does dishes.
9. Mystery Box Grill Challenge
Players: 2-4 | Time: 30 minutes
Chopped-style competition. Reveal a mystery ingredient (pineapple, jalapeños, fancy cheese) that must be incorporated. Competitors have 30 minutes to create something. Judges rate on taste and creativity.
Drinking tie-in: Losers drink for every point difference from the winner.
10. Speed Flip Challenge
Players: 2+ | Equipment: Spatula, practice patties
How many burger patties can you flip in 60 seconds? Use practice patties (or accept the mess). Dropped patties don’t count. Most successful flips wins.
Drinking penalty: One drink per dropped patty.
11. Sauce Boss
Players: 3+ | Supplies: Base ingredients
Create the best BBQ sauce from provided ingredients. 15 minutes to mix, season, and perfect. Blind taste test determines the Sauce Boss. Winner’s sauce gets used for the rest of the party.
Sabotage option: One mystery ingredient must be included (coffee, maple syrup, etc.).
12. The Perfect Char
Players: 2-4 | Judge: Dad (or designated expert)
Competition for perfect grill marks and char. Each contestant grills one piece of meat. Judged purely on visual perfection—the char lines, the color, the presentation.
Twist: You can’t lift or check your meat more than twice.
13. Kebab Architecture
Players: 3+ | Time: 10 minutes
Build the most impressive kebab from provided ingredients. Points for visual appeal, color variety, structural integrity, and creativity. Must be cookable (no purely decorative entries).
Bonus points: Themed kebabs (patriotic red/white/blue, rainbow, etc.).
😂 Dad Joke Showdowns
The groan-worthy puns. The eye-roll-inducing wordplay. The jokes so bad they’re good. Time to crown the ultimate Dad Joke Champion.
14. Dad Joke Duel
Players: 2+ per round | Audience: The more the better
Head-to-head dad joke battle. Each player delivers their best dad joke. Audience votes (or measures groans). Loser drinks. Winner advances. Tournament bracket recommended.
Championship round: Improvised jokes only—give a topic, 10 seconds to create.
15. Don’t Laugh Challenge: Dad Edition
Players: 3+ | Drinks: Any
Players take turns telling dad jokes. Everyone else must keep a straight face. If you laugh, smile, or even smirk—you drink. Poker face masters are dangerous here.
Pro tip: Eye contact makes it infinitely harder.
16. Pun-ishment
Players: 4+ | Topic cards: Required
Draw a topic card. You have 30 seconds to make as many puns about that topic as possible. Topics: grilling, tools, sports, cars, lawn care, fishing. One drink per pun under 3.
Bonus: Landing a pun that gets genuine laughter (not groans) cancels a drink.
17. The Callback
Players: 4+ | Style: Ongoing
Throughout the party, players try to naturally work dad jokes into conversation without being obvious. Others vote if the callback was smooth or forced. Forced delivery = drink. Smooth delivery = assign a drink.
Example: If someone mentions the weather, smoothly drop “I’m reading a book about anti-gravity—impossible to put down.”
18. “Hi Hungry, I’m Dad” Speed Round
Players: All | Style: Quick reaction
Whenever someone says “I’m [adjective]” (I’m tired, I’m hungry, I’m bored), the first person to reply “Hi [adjective], I’m Dad” is safe. Slowest responder drinks. If no one catches it, speaker drinks.
Party rule: This runs all day. Constant vigilance required.
19. Dad Joke Improv
Players: 3+ | Props: Random objects
Someone holds up a random object. First player to make a dad joke about it wins the round. Hesitation over 5 seconds = elimination. Last punner standing wins.
Objects: Spatula, beer can, lawn chair, phone, sunglasses—anything works.
🧠 Dad Trivia & Memory Games
How well do you know the old man? These games test family knowledge and dig up stories that might embarrass everyone involved.
20. How Well Do You Know Dad?
Players: 3+ | Host: Mom or spouse (ideally)
Questions about Dad’s preferences, history, and quirks. What was his first car? Favorite sports moment? Most embarrassing dad moment? Players write answers, Dad reveals truth. Closest answer wins points.
Drinking version: Wrong answers drink. Wildly wrong answers (not even close) = finish drink.
21. Dad’s Greatest Hits
Players: Family members | Prep: Stories collected
Before the party, collect “Dad’s greatest hits”—legendary stories, famous quotes, memorable mishaps. Read them aloud, guess the context or year. Dad confirms or adds details.
Bonus: Re-enactments for dramatic stories.
22. Finish Dad’s Catchphrase
Players: All who know Dad | Style: Quick recall
Start one of Dad’s famous sayings, players race to finish it correctly. “When I was your age…” “Money doesn’t grow on…” “You know what your problem is?” First correct answer wins.
Penalty: Wrong finishes drink. Bonus drink if you accidentally say one Dad’s never actually said.
23. Name That Dad
Players: 4+ | Supplies: Baby/young photos of various dads
Display baby or young photos of dads present at the party. Players guess which grown dad matches which baby photo. Harder than you’d think.
Drinking tie-in: Wrong guesses drink. If your own kids can’t identify you—double drinks.
24. Dad Through the Decades
Players: Family | Prep: Photo timeline
Show photos of Dad from different eras. Players guess the year or age, describe what was happening in his life then. Closest guess per photo wins a point. Most points wins.
Storytelling bonus: Dad shares the backstory for each photo.
25. The Price Was Right
Players: 4+ | Theme: Historical prices
What did things cost when Dad was young? Gas, bread, movie tickets, his first car. Players guess, Dad reveals (or looks up) actual prices. Closest without going over wins.
“When I was your age” moment: Mandatory Dad commentary on how things have changed.
🏈 Sports-Themed Games
For the sports-loving Dad. These games bring athletic competition to the backyard without requiring actual athletic ability.
26. Sports Debate Showdown
Players: 2+ debaters | Judges: Everyone else
Hot take sports debates: Best quarterback ever? Should there be a salary cap? Is [sport] actually boring? Two players argue their position for 2 minutes each. Audience votes winner.
Stakes: Loser wears the winner’s team jersey for an hour.
27. Armchair Quarterback
Players: Any | During: Game viewing
Predict plays before they happen. Correct prediction = assign a drink. Wrong prediction = take a drink. Bonus drinks for bold specific predictions (“He’s throwing deep to the left”).
Expert mode: Must predict outcome AND result (completion, interception, etc.).
28. Stats Master
Players: Sports fans | Format: Trivia
Sports statistics trivia. Career home runs? Super Bowl wins? Championship years? The player who knows the most obscure stats reigns supreme.
Drinking version: Overconfident wrong answers are double penalty.
29. Tailgate Olympics
Players: 4+ | Events: Multiple
Mini decathlon of tailgate activities: Cornhole accuracy, frisbee distance, football throw, keg stand duration (or chug speed), best grill technique. Points for each event, overall winner is champion.
Medal ceremony: Use bottle caps as medals.
30. Fantasy Draft Live
Players: 4-8 | Format: Mini-draft
Quick fantasy draft for a current game or upcoming event. Each player drafts 3 players. Score based on actual performance. Winner’s bragging rights last until next game.
Stakes option: Losers buy winner’s next round.
31. Dad’s Hall of Fame
Players: Sports fans | Style: Discussion game
Players nominate their “personal hall of famers”—athletes who meant the most to them growing up, even if not statistically great. Dad shares his picks, others share theirs. Voting optional.
Drinking bonus: Drink every time someone gets nostalgic about a “you had to be there” sports moment.
🎯 Lawn Game Tournaments
The backyard classics. These games are Father’s Day staples for a reason—easy to play, hard to master, perfect with a drink in hand.
32. Cornhole Championship
Players: 4+ (pairs) | Format: Tournament bracket
The undisputed king of backyard games. Standard party game rules: 1 point for board, 3 for hole, first to 21 wins. Run a tournament bracket. Champion holds title until next gathering.
Drinking rules: Losers finish their drinks. Getting skunked (21-0) = shotgun a beer.
33. Horseshoes (or Ring Toss)
Players: 2-4 | Equipment: Horseshoe pit or ring toss set
Classic Dad game. Ringers are worth 3, leaners are 2, closest is 1. Play to 21. The satisfying clang of a ringer never gets old.
Drinking version: Opponents drink equal to points scored against them.
34. Ladder Toss
Players: 2-4 | Scoring: Top rung 3, middle 2, bottom 1
Toss bolas (balls on strings) onto a three-rung ladder. Looks easy until you’re actually trying. First to exactly 21 wins—going over resets your score.
Drinking twist: Must drink while opponent is tossing as a distraction.
35. Kubb (Viking Chess)
Players: 2-12 (teams) | Style: Strategic
Nordic game where teams throw batons to knock over wooden blocks. More strategic than it looks. Perfect for dads who like chess as much as cornhole.
Viking rules: Drink mead (or beer) whenever your king block is hit.
36. Bocce Ball
Players: 2-8 | Vibe: Relaxed competition
Roll balls closest to the pallino (target ball). The sophisticated dad’s lawn game. Play on grass, sand, or gravel—each surface changes the strategy.
Italian rules: Must be holding wine or an Italian beer while playing.
37. Giant Jenga
Players: 2-6 | Equipment: Oversized Jenga set
Same rules as regular Jenga but bigger stakes (literally). The crash is more satisfying. Write drinking rules or dares on some blocks for added chaos.
Dad rule: Dad gets to deliver color commentary during tense pulls.
38. Kan Jam
Players: 4 (pairs) | Equipment: Kan Jam set
Throw a frisbee at a can while your partner tries to deflect it in. Instant wins if you get it through the slot. Surprisingly competitive once everyone gets the hang of it.
Drinking rules: Deflector drinks if they whiff. Thrower drinks if they’re not even close.
🃏 Poker & Card Night Games
For the Dad who’d rather be at a card table than running around the yard. Classic games with drinking twists.
39. Texas Hold’em Tournament
Players: 4-10 | Format: Tournament style
Standard poker tournament. Start with equal chips, play until one winner. Buy-backs optional. The perfect post-BBQ activity when the sun goes down.
Drinking stakes: Losing a big hand = take a drink. Getting knocked out = finish your drink.
40. Liar’s Poker
Players: 3-8 | Equipment: Dollar bills
Use serial numbers on dollar bills as your “hand.” Bid on how many of a certain digit exist across all bills. Bluffing is essential. Dad’s poker face finally has a purpose.
Stakes: Loser of each round buys the next round (or drinks).
41. Blackjack Dealer Dad
Players: 3-6 | Dealer: Dad
Dad deals blackjack. Instead of chips, use drink sips. Beat the dealer = assign sips. Lose = take sips equal to your bet. Blackjack = dealer takes a shot.
House edge: Dad gets to tell stories between hands.
42. Three-Card Monte
Players: 2+ | Dealer: Rotating
Classic street game. Dealer shuffles three cards, players bet on which is the queen. Pure luck with a skill illusion. The dealer always wins… or does he?
Drinking twist: Wrong guess = drink. Right guess = dealer drinks double.
43. Indian Poker
Players: 3-8 | Equipment: Deck of cards
Everyone holds one card to their forehead without seeing it. You can see everyone else’s card. Bet on whether you think you have the highest card. Pure bluffing.
Dad advantage: Reading faces is a learned skill. Dad’s been doing it for years.
44. Pitch or Euchre
Players: 4 (partners) | Style: Regional favorite
Depending on where Dad grew up, one of these is probably “the” card game. Four players, two teams, trump suits, and regional rules nobody can agree on.
Drinking rule: Losing team drinks per point difference.
🔧 Garage & Workshop Games
For the hands-on Dad. These games celebrate the tinkerer, the fixer, the “I can probably repair that” mindset.
45. Tool Identification Challenge
Players: 3+ | Location: Garage or workshop
Blindfolded players must identify tools by touch alone. Timer running. Correct ID = safe. Wrong ID = drink. Dad probably crushes this one.
Expert mode: Obscure tools only (ball peen hammer vs regular hammer, Robertson vs Phillips).
46. Assembly Race
Players: 2-4 | Equipment: Disassembled items
Everyone gets an identical disassembled item (simple furniture, small engine part, electronics). First to correctly reassemble wins. Bonus points for no leftover pieces.
Drinking handicap: Experienced mechanics must drink while others have head start.
47. Name That Part
Players: 3+ | Format: Trivia/identification
Show engine parts, plumbing fixtures, electrical components. First to correctly name it wins the round. This is Dad’s moment to shine.
Teaching moment: Dad explains what each part does to the losers.
48. Fix-It or Ditch-It
Players: 3+ | Props: Broken items
Bring broken items. Group debates: is it worth fixing or should you toss it? After voting, reveal what Dad actually did with it. Match Dad’s decision = safe. Wrong = drink.
Dad philosophy: “They don’t make ’em like they used to.”
49. Duct Tape Challenge
Players: 2-4 | Supplies: Duct tape, random materials
Given only duct tape and random supplies, build something useful in 10 minutes. Could be a phone holder, drink coozy, tool organizer—anything. Judge on creativity and functionality.
Dad bonus: If Dad can actually use the winning creation, creator gets immunity from one future drink.
❤️ Dad Appreciation Games
Okay, time to get a little sentimental (but not too much—this is still Dad we’re talking about). Games that actually celebrate the old man.
50. Reasons We Love Dad
Players: Family | Vibe: Heartfelt
Go around sharing one reason you appreciate Dad. Can be funny, serious, or both. No drinking rules—this one’s just genuine appreciation. Have tissues nearby for Mom.
Tip: Start with funny to warm up, end with sincere.
51. Dad Awards Ceremony
Players: All | Prep: Awards/certificates
Create joke awards: “Best Dad Joke of 2025,” “Most Likely to Fall Asleep in the Recliner,” “Champion Lawn Mower.” Present with dramatic speeches. Let Dad give an acceptance speech for each.
Drinking tie-in: Drink during each speech (keeps them short).
52. Thanks, Dad
Players: Family | Format: Storytelling
Share stories of times Dad helped, fixed something, gave advice, or came through when needed. Take turns. Dad responds. It’s like a roast but positive.
Rule: One drink of appreciation after each story.
53. What Would Dad Do?
Players: 4+ | Format: Scenario game
Present hypothetical scenarios. Everyone writes what they think Dad would do. Dad reveals his actual answer. Matches get points. Closest to Dad’s mindset wins.
Scenarios: “The car won’t start,” “Someone disrespects the family,” “Major appliance breaks the day before a party.”
54. Dad’s Life Lessons
Players: Family | Style: Sharing circle
Each person shares the best piece of advice or lesson Dad taught them. Can be explicit (“measure twice, cut once”) or implicit (showing up reliably). Dad gets final word.
Drinking option: Toast to Dad after each lesson shared.
😎 Chill Backyard Games
For when competitive games feel like too much effort. These games go perfectly with lawn chairs, cold drinks, and long summer evenings.
55. Sunset Stories
Players: Any | Vibe: Relaxed
As the sun sets, take turns sharing stories. Dad’s adventures, family history, “back in my day” tales. No scoring—just conversation. The best Father’s Day moments are often unstructured.
Enhancement: Campfire or fire pit makes everything better.
56. Music Roulette: Dad Edition
Players: 3+ | Equipment: Speaker, phones
Take turns playing songs Dad loves. Others guess artist/title before Dad confirms. Bonus points for deep cuts. Evolves into everyone sharing their music.
Drinking option: Drink if you can’t name the artist.
57. Two Truths and a Lie: Dad’s Life
Players: 4+ | Format: Classic game
Dad tells two truths and one lie about his life. Family guesses which is the lie. Then family members do the same about their memories of Dad. Reveals stories nobody knew.
Tip: Dad’s real life is often stranger than fiction.
58. Cigar Circle
Players: Cigar/whiskey enthusiasts | Vibe: Sophisticated chill
If Dad’s into cigars, set up a proper smoking circle. Discuss the notes, share stories, solve the world’s problems. No formal game—just ritual.
Non-smoker option: Same energy, different beverage focus.
59. Stargazing Challenge
Players: Any | Time: After dark
Identify constellations, planets, satellites. Dad probably knows some from Boy Scout days. App assistance allowed for verification. First to spot a shooting star assigns drinks.
Storytelling tie-in: Share what you were doing during major meteor showers or eclipses.
60. Would You Rather: Dad Edition
Players: 3+ | Format: Discussion game
Dad-themed would-you-rathers: “Never mow a lawn again or never grill again?” “Know everything about cars or know everything about home repair?” Leads to philosophical debates.
Drinking twist: Minority opinion drinks.
61. The Advice Column
Players: Family | Format: Q&A
Ask Dad for advice on anything—serious or silly. Relationships, careers, grilling technique, life choices. Let him be the expert he is. Write down the best advice for posterity.
Rule: No interrupting Dad’s wisdom. Toast after each answer.
62. Memory Lane Slideshow
Players: Family | Equipment: TV/projector
Show old family photos and videos. Pause for stories, laugh at fashion choices, appreciate how far everyone’s come. Drinking optional—emotions run high anyway.
Tip: Prepare this in advance for maximum impact.
63. Hammock Rotation
Players: Any with hammock access | Rules: Minimal
Set a timer. Whoever’s in the hammock when it goes off has to tell a Dad story or give up the spot. Very low-stakes competition for prime relaxation real estate.
Dad privilege: Dad can veto anyone and claim the hammock at any time.
64. The Long Game
Players: 2+ | Equipment: Chess, checkers, or similar
A proper sit-down strategy game with Dad. No rush, no time limits. Let the game breathe. Conversation happens between moves. This is quality time in its purest form.
Beverage pairing: Whatever Dad’s drinking, you’re drinking.
65. Gratitude Jar
Players: All | Supplies: Jar, paper, pens
Throughout the party, write notes of appreciation, favorite Dad memories, or thanks. Drop them in a jar. Give to Dad at the end. He can read them later (or now if he wants attention).
Year-round version: Leave the jar out. Fill it throughout the year. Read on next Father’s Day.
🎯 Tips for the Best Father’s Day Party
Match Games to Dad
Not all dads are the same. Some want competition; others want to relax. Some love being the center of attention; others prefer to observe. Choose games that fit YOUR dad.
Don’t Over-Schedule
Father’s Day isn’t about constant activities. Build in downtime. Some of the best moments happen organically between planned events. Let the day breathe.
Food First, Games Second
The BBQ is the main event for most dads. Make sure games complement the food, not compete with it. Lawn games during grilling, card games after dinner.
Include All Ages
If kids and grandkids are present, mix in games everyone can play. Save the drinking-heavy games for after bedtime or when adults are separate.
Capture the Moments
Take photos and videos. Dad probably won’t ask, but he’ll appreciate having them later. Document the dad jokes, the grill triumph, the competitive cornhole match.
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End Strong
Whatever games you play, end the day with something meaningful—a toast, a thank-you, or just quality time. The games are fun; the connection is the point.


