If you decide to play with a group of kids, be prepared for some shrieking because kids really get into it, which makes it all the more fun for the grown-ups. You can play in small or large groups—but you have to sit around a table to play, so play with as many people as you have chairs. All you need for the game is a coin, a table, and some chairs. Divide the players into two teams. The teams should sit across from each other at the table. Play starts with everyone’s hands under the table. Team 1 starts the play by passing a coin under the table from hand to hand, back and forth, amongst their own team. It is the goal of team 2 to figure out where the coin is at a given time. Because the coin is passed under the table, team 2 can’t see where it is as it is passed along. The coin will finally rest with one person. Where it stops nobody knows (at least on team 2). After about 15 seconds the coin passing should stop—it doesn’t matter with whom it stops, but you should give it enough time to confuse the opposing team. On a given signal (which your team can agree to before play begins) the coin stops and everyone on team 1 starts to bang their hands, palms-down—on the tabletop. One person will have the coin and the coin must stay in his or her hand—even as the banging is happening. Now team 2 has to guess where the coin is. They do so by pointing to a player saying “Up Jenkins.” Each time a player lifts an empty hand, team 2 scores a point. Why? Because the object of the game is to leave the palm containing the coin to the very end. If team 2 guesses the hand containing the coin before the very last hand is revealed, team 1 scores a point and gets to hide the coin again. If team 2 chooses all the empty hands and finds the coin in the very last palm, they get a chance to hide the coin. You’ll need to concentrate and keep a very straight face during this game. If you have the coin and you so much as smirk, you could give away the whole game! It’s all about the art of the bluff.