Taskfather is a Christmas challenge event built around short rounds, silly instructions and plenty of room for lateral thinking. Teams are given a task, a timer and usually a few festive bits and bobs, then they work out the best way to score points, impress the judge or both. Some rounds are clever. Some are chaotic. A few are gloriously overthought.
The format is simple. Your group splits into teams, each task gets explained, and off they go. One round might be about building something out of wrapping paper and tinsel. Another could be a memory game, a performance task or a head-to-head Christmas conundrum. The scoring is part skill, part judgement, part “what on earth was that supposed to be?”, which keeps the atmosphere light.
That mix is what makes it work so well for teams. Everyone gets a way in. The loud ones can pitch. The quiet ones can plan. The practical people can build. The quick thinkers can spot the twist. Because there isn’t one perfect answer, people relax and start having a go instead of worrying about getting it wrong.
It also suits mixed groups nicely. You don’t need the whole room to be on the same fitness level, confidence level or creative level. The tasks can be set up as seated, table-based or fully active depending on your venue and your crowd. If you’ve got a group who’d rather keep their feet on the floor, that’s fine. If they want more movement and noise, we can dial it up.
For Christmas parties, it lands nicely between formal and full-on silly. It feels festive without becoming tacky. Think crackers, cards, baubles, wrapping paper, sweets and a few seasonal oddities that make sense once the clock starts. You can keep it clean and sharp, or lean into company in-jokes and year-end references if you want it more personal.
Taskfather is a good fit for team building, away days, office Christmas parties and conference entertainment. It works for smaller teams who want a buzzy shared activity, and it scales well for larger groups who need everyone involved without turning the event into a free-for-all. Virtual and hybrid versions can also be run, which is handy if your team’s split across sites or working from home.
We run the lot. That means the task set-up, host, timings, scoring and any props needed for the rounds. For bigger groups, we’ll also put support staff in place so the thing keeps moving and nobody’s left waiting around. You get a proper event, not a pile of printouts and a hope for the best.
If you want a Christmas team event that gives people a reason to collaborate, improvise and have a few muddy laughs without the mud, Taskfather is spot on. It’s structured enough to run smoothly and daft enough to be memorable, which is usually the sweet spot.





