Infinity Beer Pong – Awesome, Psychedelic Beer Pong Table!
Do you need a new beer pong table for your man cave? Have you been looking for a beer pong table to spice up your next party?
Then, look no further! The Infinity Beer Pong Table in my opinion is the best beer pong table to get your party started!
Their tables have multi-color L.E.D. lights that rotate between 8 colors and 4 display modes. These tables are built with metal frame construction and impact resistant infinity mirrors that will keep your guests entertained all night. The special mirrors bounce in the light to create a psychedelic illusion of looking into endless space while playing beer pong and other party games!
Start a dance floor around a beer pong table? Why not. Each table come with a pair of infrared remote controls that sets the color, transition mode or music mode that will flash the lights to the beat of the surroundings. Here’s a list of other key features for each table.
Magnetic Lock – Magnets help table closed when folded
Customized Graphics – You can personalize your table!
Detachable legs and folding Center – Breaks down into an easily transportable unit
So, what are you waiting for?
To purchase the table and learn more about the Infinity Beer Pong.
Click on the link below!
https://www.infinitybeerpong.com/products/infinity-usa-custom-led-beer-pong-table?sscid=81k4_owiax
A Brief History Lesson – How did Beer Pong get started?
Beer pong, also known as Beirut, is a drinking game in which players throw a ping pong ball across a table with the intent of landing the ball in a cup of beer on the other end. Beer Pong is believed to have origins in the 1950s and 1960s within the fraternities of Dartmouth College. During those times, their version was more like a traditional game of Ping Pong because they used paddles and a net. Sometime in the 1980s in the United States, the game change to no paddles or net and the name Beer Pong was adopted.
From Wikipedia:
Bucknell University‘s student-run newspaper, The Bucknellian, claims Delta Upsilon fraternity members at Bucknell created “Throw Pong”, a game very similar to beer pong, during the 1970s,[9][14] and that “Throw Pong” was then brought to Lehigh University by fraternity brothers who visited Bucknell and this led to the creation of the version of beer pong that is played today.[9]
In some places, Beer Pong refers to the version of the game with paddles, and Beirut to the version without. However, according to a CollegeHumor survey, beer pong is the more common term than Beirut for the paddle-less game.[15]
The origin of the name “Beirut” is disputed. A 2004 op-ed article in The Daily Princetonian, the student newspaper at Princeton University, suggested that the name was possibly coined at Bucknell or Lehigh University around the time of the Lebanese Civil War. Beirut, the capital of Lebanon, was the scene of much fighting during the war, particularly mortar fire.[16]
Traditionally, the game of beer pong has been played by countless variations of rule sets. In recent years, organizations such as The World Series of Beer Pong have put forth “official” rules. Typically, players abide by a uniform set of “house rules” which are often consistent within one university or region of the country (e.g. “West Coast rules”) or may vary on a “house-by-house” basis.[23] Number of cups, bouncing, re-racking, amount of alcohol, distance shots must be taken from, etc. may all vary. All house rules should be posted or verbally stated and understood by both teams before the game starts.
The order of play varies – both players on one team can shoot, followed by both players on the other team, or players on opposite teams can alternate back and forth.[24] A cup that is made must immediately have its contents drunk and be removed from play. Some rule sets allow for “re-racking” (also known as “reforming“, “rearranging“, “consolidation“, and other names), which is a rearrangement of a team’s remaining cups after some have been removed. The formations, number of cups, when to rearrange and so on, depend on the rule set. For example, a team with three remaining cups may ask the other team to “re-rack” the cups into a single triangle formation.[25]
Common house rules allow players to ‘finger’ or blow the ball out of the cup if the ball spins around the inner rim. Another common house rule states that if a team makes both shots during their turn, a ‘rollback’ occurs allowing each player to shoot again.[26] In the World Series of Beer Pong rules, only a single-ball ‘rollback’ occurs resulting in a three cup maximum that can be made per turn.