One of the games I play as a passenger when I’m riding in cars is making name combinations from the license plates I see. Like, if I see BEM7, I would make a combination starting with those letters, and it would be a boy, because odd #. So, let’s say it was
[name_u]Benjamin[/name_u] [name_m]Evander[/name_m] [name_u]Micah[/name_u]
Then I would keep an eye out for another car whose letters started with B or ended with M. When I found one, whatever end letter they had in common, that would become the last name, like if it was CRM9, I would turn [name_u]Micah[/name_u] into a last name, like ‘Morgenthal’, and then match the new initials to the same last name, like
[name_m]Caleb[/name_m] [name_u]Ryan[/name_u] Morgenthal
[name_u]Benjamin[/name_u] [name_m]Evander[/name_m] Morgenthal.
If instead, I’d seen BPC4, I might turn the B into Brookheimer, making it
Brookheimer, [name_f]Phoebe[/name_f] [name_f]Catherine[/name_f] and
Brookheimer, [name_m]Evander[/name_m] [name_u]Micah[/name_u]
So, the first poster will come up with a grouping of 3 names of the same gender. The second gets to decide which end initial is going to be used for the surname, and then match it with another name following the same pattern. They will then leave a set of 3 names of the same gender for the next poster.
Poster 1:
[name_m]Andreas[/name_m] [name_m]Isaac[/name_m] [name_m]Romeo[/name_m]
Poster 2:
Abernathy, [name_m]Isaac[/name_m] [name_m]Romeo[/name_m]
Abernathy, [name_m]David[/name_m] [name_u]Bennett[/name_u]
[name_f]Bella[/name_f] [name_f]Katherine[/name_f] [name_f]Clarissa[/name_f]
Poster 3:
[name_f]Bella[/name_f] [name_f]Katherine[/name_f] [name_u]Clarke[/name_u]
[name_m]Vincent[/name_m] [name_u]Oliver[/name_u] [name_u]Clarke[/name_u]
Okay? Let’s start!
[name_m]Sebastian[/name_m] [name_m]Thomas[/name_m] [name_m]Fabian[/name_m]