Search movies

Find a movie page to open.

What About Bob? Drinking Game Rules

What About Bob? movie poster

Kick off your What About Bob? drinking game with a classic 1991 Bill Murray comedy. Follow Bob to Lake Winnipesaukee as the calm turns to chaos. Sip when he needles Dr. Leo Marvin hard. Raise a toast to every Baby Steps moment. Frank Oz keeps the pace tight and funny. Richard Dreyfuss brings a slow burn as Leo. The chaos builds scene by scene until you are laughing hard.

These rules turn awkward dinners, therapy talk, and lake antics into steady sips and big laughs. This movie drinking game plays well with friends or a chill night in, and it keeps the vibe fun. Keep water nearby, take breaks, and please drink safely. Ready to take baby steps toward a great movie night?

What About Bob? Drinking Game Rules:

  • Take a sip when Bob says "Baby steps" or takes tiny steps.
  • Take a sip when Bob clings to Leo or shows up uninvited.
  • Drink when Gil the goldfish appears or Bob talks to him.
  • Take a sip when Bob wears the "Don't Hassle Me I'm Local" shirt.
  • Drink when Bob shouts "I'm sailing!" or calls himself a sailor.
  • Take a sip when Bob repeats "I feel good, I feel great, I feel wonderful."
  • Drink when Leo plugs Baby Steps or his Good Morning America appearance.
  • Take a sip when the family laughs with Bob while Leo fumes.
  • Drink when Bob helps Siggy face the diving board.
  • Finish your drink when Siggy finally makes the dive.
  • Finish your drink when Bob takes over the Good Morning America interview.
  • Drink when Leo tries to unload Bob on a hospital or the police.
  • Take a sip when Bob moans with joy at the dinner table.
  • Drink when Bob pleads "Gimme, gimme" or "I need" in a panic.
  • Take a sip when Leo screams "Bob!" or loses his cool.
  • Finish your drink when Leo announces "death therapy" and straps Bob up.
  • Finish your drink when the lake house explodes.
Is this a good drinking game movie?Be the first to vote on this drinking game.
About the Movie

Title: What About Bob?

Released: 17 May 1991

Rated: PG

Runtime: 99 min

Genre: Comedy

Plot: Dr. Leo Marvin, an egotistical psychotherapist in New York City, is looking forward to his upcoming appearance on a "Good Morning America" telecast, during which he plans to brag about "Baby Steps," his new book about emotional disorder theories in which he details his philosophy of treating patients and their phobias. Meanwhile, Bob Wiley is a recluse who is so afraid to leave his own apartment that he has to talk himself out the door. When he is pawned off on Leo by a psychotherapist colleague, he becomes attached to him. Leo finds Bob extremely annoying. When Leo accompanies his wife, Faye, his daughter, Anna, and his son, Sigmund, to a peaceful New Hampshire lakeside cottage for a month-long vacation, he thinks he's been freed from Bob. Leo expects to mesmerize his family with his prowess as a brilliant husband and remarkable father who knows all there is to know about instructing Faye and raising Anna and Sigmund. But Bob isn't going to let him enjoy a quiet summer by the lake. By cleverly tricking the telephone operator at Leo's exchange, Bob discovers the whereabouts of him and his family. Despite his phobia about traveling alone, Bob somehow manages to talk himself onto a bus, and he arrives in New Hampshire. Leo's vacation comes to a screeching halt the moment he sees him. With his witty personality, his ability to manipulate people, and his good sense of humor, he quickly becomes an annoyance to Leo, but not to Faye, Anna, and Sigmund, because they think he is fun while Leo is dull. Fearing that he's losing his family to him, Leo frantically tries to find a way to make him go back to New York City, and it's not as easy as he had hoped. He finds himself stepping outside the law to try to get Bob to stay away from Faye, Anna, and Sigmund--he slowly goes berserk, and makes plans to kill Bob.

Language: English

Drinking Game Watch is your source for drinking games for movies. New movies added all the time. Remember to drink responsibly.