Strip Rock-paper-scissors - Ghost Edition-eng-h-ga... May 2026

By Alex "The Game Theorist" Mercer Introduction: When Childhood Meets the Afterlife Rock-Paper-Scissors (RPS) is humanity’s ultimate tiebreaker. It’s simple, elegant, and has decided everything from who pays for coffee to international lawsuits. But in the dark corners of internet folklore and indie game design forums, a legend stirs—a variant so bizarre, so hauntingly playful, that it defies all logic.

Whether you encounter it as a niche English-translated h-game, a Halloween drinking game (substitute stripping with sips of ectoplasm-flavored punch), or a thought experiment in game theory, one truth remains: Strip Rock-Paper-Scissors - Ghost Edition-Eng-h-ga...

Each player writes their name on a strip of paper (ironic) and places it under a candle. The "Ghost Host" (rotating role) recites: "Spirit of the unfinished game, we offer you a wager. Play our hands. Take our threads. But respect the safe word." By Alex "The Game Theorist" Mercer Introduction: When

Each player contributes three "micro-stakes" (hair ties, shoelaces, or actual clothing items) and one "macro-stake" (a shirt, a jacket, or a haunted trinket). Whether you encounter it as a niche English-translated

Furthermore, the ghost acts as a social lubricant. If a human loses a shirt to another human, embarrassment is direct. If a ghost "takes" the shirt? Blame the supernatural. This reduces real-world friction and increases laughter. Want to play this without waiting for a game developer? Here’s a SFW tabletop version for ages 18+ (maturity for consent, not explicit content).

These games often add a – each time the ghost wins, the gauge fills. When full, the ghost unleashes a special move (e.g., "Shroud of Invisibility" – player’s next throw is hidden, but they lose a random item no matter what).

Now go forth, light a black candle, and may your draws be ever in your favor—or against your clothing. Have you played a variant of this? Share your ghost stories (and lost socks) in the comments below. And remember: if a cold hand taps your shoulder during a tiebreaker, just forfeit the round. It’s not worth the haunting.