The Party Toolkit

Teens Never Have I Ever

Page 2

More teens Never Have I Ever prompts to keep the circle laughing, page 2 of 3.

  1. 41. Never have I ever gotten so lost in a daydream that I missed a whole lesson
  2. 42. Never have I ever pretended to lose signal to end a boring call
  3. 43. Never have I ever eaten my lunch during first period because I was starving
  4. 44. Never have I ever gotten caught singing loudly with my headphones in
  5. 45. Never have I ever forgotten it was picture day and looked like a mess
  6. 46. Never have I ever pretended to agree with a teacher just to end the argument faster
  7. 47. Never have I ever tripped over my own backpack strap
  8. 48. Never have I ever stayed quiet when a teacher asked who did something
  9. 49. Never have I ever texted my parent to bring the homework I forgot at home
  10. 50. Never have I ever pretended a group chat notification was something important
  11. 51. Never have I ever fake sneezed to cover up a laugh in class
  12. 52. Never have I ever spent an entire class period watching the clock
  13. 53. Never have I ever gotten caught mimicking a teacher right as they turned around
  14. 54. Never have I ever forgotten my lunch money and had to borrow from a friend
  15. 55. Never have I ever pretended to have read the assigned chapter
  16. 56. Never have I ever accidentally liked a very old post while scrolling someone's profile
  17. 57. Never have I ever hidden a bad grade from my parents for as long as possible
  18. 58. Never have I ever pretended to be on my way when I had not even left yet
  19. 59. Never have I ever gotten caught daydreaming and called on with no idea of the question
  20. 60. Never have I ever tried to look cool and walked into a door
  21. 61. Never have I ever begged to stay home and then felt bored within an hour
  22. 62. Never have I ever pretended a school event was cancelled to skip it
  23. 63. Never have I ever accidentally set my alarm for the wrong day
  24. 64. Never have I ever laughed at a meme in class and had to explain myself
  25. 65. Never have I ever finished someone else's snack and blamed a sibling
  26. 66. Never have I ever pretended I already knew a spoiler to seem in the loop
  27. 67. Never have I ever gotten caught talking about someone right as they walked up
  28. 68. Never have I ever forgotten my password to my own account
  29. 69. Never have I ever pretended to be older to get into a movie
  30. 70. Never have I ever tried to sneak snacks into the movies in my hoodie pocket
  31. 71. Never have I ever stayed on a call pretending to study while actually gaming
  32. 72. Never have I ever forgotten the words to a song I had heard a hundred times
  33. 73. Never have I ever pretended a group project was going great when it was falling apart
  34. 74. Never have I ever gotten caught taking selfies in a public bathroom mirror
  35. 75. Never have I ever texted the wrong person the exact thing I was hiding
  36. 76. Never have I ever begged for a snack five minutes after saying I was not hungry
  37. 77. Never have I ever pretended to be interested so I would not seem rude
  38. 78. Never have I ever hidden under a blanket to keep watching after being told to sleep
  39. 79. Never have I ever gotten a whole inside joke wrong in front of everyone
  40. 80. Never have I ever pretended my teacher never assigned homework over the weekend

FAQ

Are these Never Have I Ever questions appropriate for teens?

Yes. Every prompt in this category is written to be clean and school-appropriate. There is nothing about alcohol, drugs, or adult themes, so it is safe for teen parties, sleepovers, and youth groups.

What age group is this list best for?

It is aimed at roughly thirteen to eighteen year olds, but the prompts are mild enough that younger kids can join in too. For all-ages events, the family-friendly category works well alongside it.

Can teachers or youth leaders use these?

They make a great icebreaker for classrooms, clubs, and camps. Pick a handful ahead of time, go around the group, and use them to help students loosen up and get to know each other.

How do you play at a sleepover?

Sit in a circle and hold up ten fingers each. Take turns reading a prompt, and put a finger down if you have done it. The last person with fingers up wins, and the stories along the way are half the fun.

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