What's the Best Holiday to Game?

With the Thanksgiving season upon us in the U.S. and many families getting together around a table, it's not too much of a leap that some of them might play a tabletop game after dinner. Which holidays lend themselves to playing RPGs with your family?

With the Thanksgiving season upon us in the U.S. and many families getting together around a table, it's not too much of a leap that some of them might play a tabletop game after dinner. Which holidays lend themselves to playing RPGs with your family?

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Photo by Libby Penner on Unsplash

Tabletop role-playing games were always meant to be played around a table. In the earliest games, that table was large -- co-creator of Dungeons & Dragons Gary Gygax references games with as many as 20 players -- not unlike a large family gathering sitting down to a meal. That's not all holiday get-togethers share with tabletop gaming.

Experienced gamers know that a significant barrier to gaming is scheduling. National holidays make that easier, ensuring friends and family are off from work and school to be able to play. Scheduling games to play on certain holidays can be a good idea, unless there are other obligations that wouldn't make it appropriate to play. Depending on the holiday, those obligations can be significant. Let's take a look at the federal holidays and their applicability to gaming:
[h=3]New Year's Eve/Day[/h]There's no reason that New Year's Eve can't be a tabletop gaming event, particularly as games often run late into the night. That said, New Years is often a time to spend with a significant other, so any game will likely need to be inclusive for both. There might even be value in a game that races against the clock, with the finale ending at the strike of midnight.
[h=3]Martin Luther King Jr. /Columbus /Memorial /Veterans Day[/h]These holidays can be recognized as a day of service. Depending on how a family observes it, gaming would be best served as part of a community outreach (for example, an educational RPG at a library for kids). It's important to be sensitive to your player's backgrounds and preferences. If everyone is amenable, you could celebrate Memorial or Veterans Day by running a historical military-themed game as a form of remembrance.
[h=3]President's/Labor /Independence Day[/h]These holidays don't usually have a specific obligation, which makes it perfect for gamers to get together. Any game on Independence Day would be best served if it incorporates explosions into the backdrop of the game. And of course, the game will have to work around fireworks or any other celebratory activities.
[h=3]Religious Holidays/Thanksgiving[/h]Including Christmas, Jewish holidays, and Thanksgiving, these holidays tend to have a family obligation, so plans for game will likely rely on your family's interest in role-playing games and their own holiday traditions. Some holidays have specific religious observances that will make a game difficult, but if there's a holiday of a religion your family doesn't celebrate, then it's similar to the aforementioned "low obligation" holidays.

These holidays will of course vary depending on your region, country, and family customs. Any tabletop game, including role-playing games, will need to be playable by the whole family, so kids may be part of the equation. The game probably can't drag on for very long. And for gift-giving holidays, gamer gifts can be put to good use right after.

No matter what holiday you celebrate, here's to getting together with friends and family, sharing a good meal, and hopefully a good game too!

Mike "Talien" Tresca is a freelance game columnist, author, communicator, and a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to http://amazon.com. You can follow him at Patreon.
 

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Michael Tresca

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Henry

Autoexreginated
It's funny, but for the past decade or so, the big holidays are for my groups the WORST time to game, because those are the occasions that everyone schedules to spend extra time with family in most of our cases, being largely 40-somethings with kids or extended families. Our typical schedule is that our last game of the year is usually around mid-December, and the next game is about three or four weeks later usually on the second week of January (after New Years' has passed.)
 

It's funny, but for the past decade or so, the big holidays are for my groups the WORST time to game, because those are the occasions that everyone schedules to spend extra time with family in most of our cases, being largely 40-somethings with kids or extended families. Our typical schedule is that our last game of the year is usually around mid-December, and the next game is about three or four weeks later usually on the second week of January (after New Years' has passed.)

Yep. Even without kids, holiday time is typically family time (it's basically the only time of the year where I see my parents for more than a weekend). Thus holidays are typically board game/card game time, and RPG activity goes into hibernation and wakes up only a few days or weeks after that.
 


dvvega

Explorer
Personally, I find all of the holidays lend themselves to great gaming - no matter the country - as long as the holiday itself is fully understood.

As I wrote that my mind wandered to the movie Coco - about Dias de los Muertos. That would be a great adventure for children to go on, firstly as an education of a cultural belief and secondly as a great adventure.

Anyway, any holiday works as long as the group understands the holiday and why it is a holiday.

D
 

MNblockhead

A Title Much Cooler Than Anything on the Old Site
Chinese New Year is made for gaming. You get a week off to visit and handout with family and in many families gaming is already part of it, albeit mahjong and card games, or taking the kids to markets to play various carnie-style games. Board games would fit in okay, especially if playing with kids. Would be hard to get the in-laws to play TTRPGs though....
 

jedijon

Explorer
It’s really hard for me to tell how serious this article is—playing war games you wouldn’t normally to celebrate someone’s military service?

Did I maybe misread the part that I’ll be out of town and gathering with people of widely mixed ages and interests—who I see but rarely? Because that’s what my holidays often are.

And IF I AM in town with my main group of friends...many of them will have traveled.

Nope. A quick board game among that minority that is interested—that’s the ticket. And you can expand that to having everyone participate in a “party game” but you kinda have to know what type will be successful, have seen the Korean game of horses amuse a crowd with throwing the sticks when their family visited our family at Christmas.

I won’t be roleplaying with or near my extended family, just not a good play, that.
 

pogre

Legend
We have a long tradition of Holiday gaming around here. We even have a sort of mini-convention the week between Christmas and New Year's Day. This weekend we have 3d Zombicide Black Plague on Friday evening, a big miniatures game on Saturday afternoon, a WFRP 4e adventure Saturday night, and the usual D&D campaign Sunday.
 


Richards

Legend
We game with one other family of four, and for close to the last decade we've always made it a point to have them over on New Year's Day around noon for the first D&D session of the year, followed by a two-family dinner. That's also often when we exchange the Christmas gifts we got for each other, as we're usually each busy with our own respective families around Christmas.

Johnathan
 

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