Now you will get a paper with a fold and a picture. Now, pass your paper to the next person on your left (if that is the way you are passing). The original sentence must be obscured by the fold but the picture must be visible. Fold your paper where the next person can see ONLY your picture, not the original sentence. Your paper should have a sentence at the top and a picture just below it. Once you are finished drawing, you have to fold the paper.
You don't want to draw it too big, because the paper should be passed and drawn or written on several times but draw large enough so that the picture can be understood. So, if the sentence is, "A man is driving a car", you draw that just below the original sentence. You read the sentence and then you must draw the sentence in a picture just below the sentence. Now you have a new piece of paper with a sentence written at the top. The direction doesn't matter, as long as everyone passes the same direction, i.e. Second, once your sentence is complete, you pass the paper to your left or right. It can be anything you want but just a single thought encapsulated in one sentence. Then each participant writes a sentence at the top of the paper. Everyone writes their name at the very bottom o f the paper. Every person gets a blank piece of paper, with or without lines is unimportant. This game doesn't have a name that I know of, so I call it the sentence-draw-fold game. A few years back I was introduced to a game that I consider to the the funniest I have ever played.
Card games, games with people in circles, board games, geocaching (is that a game?), organised sports and the list goes on and on.