
Prosecco Pong Drinking Game
Smokeshop
by WL International
Prosecco Pong Drinking Game
Prosecco pong is a drinking game kit containing 12 plastic prosecco flutes and 3 pink ping-pong balls, designed as a sparkling-wine alternative to traditional beer pong. Each set gives you everything you need to set up a proper tournament on any flat surface. Think of it as beer pong that got dressed up for brunch but still ended up under the table by midnight. If you're looking to buy a prosecco pong drinking game that actually holds up through a full evening, this is the kit we keep restocked at Azarius for good reason.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Glasses included | 12 plastic prosecco flutes |
| Balls included | 3 pink ping-pong balls |
| Glass material | Lightweight plastic |
| Players | 2+ (typically 2 teams) |
| SKU | HS1821 |
| Category | Smokeshop — Party Games |
| Feature | Prosecco Pong | Standard Beer Pong |
|---|---|---|
| Glass type | Plastic flutes (smaller) | Large plastic cups (16 oz) |
| Drink per shot | Sip-sized (~80 ml) | Gulp-sized (~350 ml) |
| Game pace | Faster rounds, lighter intake | Slower rounds, heavier intake |
| Typical drink | Prosecco, cava, sparkling wine | Lager, ale |
| Aesthetic | Brunch-party chic | Classic frat-house |
Hosting a full house party? Pair your prosecco pong set with a deck of Drinking Ludo or another party game from our smokeshop collection. Multiple games on the table means nobody's standing around waiting for a turn — and the evening escalates exactly as fast as you'd hope.
Why You Need a Prosecco Pong Set at Your Next Party
A drinking game on the table breaks the ice faster than any playlist, playlist shuffle, or awkward icebreaker question — according to party-game research compiled by the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA), structured social drinking activities tend to reduce initial social hesitation in group settings. Here's the honest truth about house parties: the first 45 minutes are always a bit stiff. People are clutching drinks, making small talk about commutes, and nobody's quite committed to having a proper time yet. Prosecco pong specifically works because it lowers the barrier — people who'd never touch a red cup will happily lob a pink ball at a flute of bubbly.
The lightweight plastic glasses are the right call here. Glass flutes and ping-pong balls are a recipe for a 2am A&E visit. These hold up to repeated bouncing, the odd fumble, and enthusiastic celebrations. They're reusable too — rinse them out and they're ready for the next round. The one thing to watch: they're not the sturdiest glasses you'll ever hold. They're party-weight plastic, not dishwasher-proof crystal. Treat them like what they are — disposable-adjacent fun — and they'll last you several sessions without any drama.
Compared to a standard beer pong set, this one trades volume for style. Beer pong uses big cups that hold a serious amount of liquid per shot. Prosecco flutes are smaller, which means the game moves faster but you're sipping rather than chugging. That's actually a decent trade-off if your crowd prefers sparkling wine over lager, or if you just want the game to last more than 6 minutes before someone taps out.
How to Play Prosecco Pong
The standard prosecco pong rules follow beer pong format: two teams of 1–4 players take turns throwing ping-pong balls into the opposing team's glasses, and a successful landing means the defending team drinks and removes that glass. Here is the full step-by-step setup and play sequence:
- Split the 12 glasses into 2 sets of 6. Arrange each set in a triangle formation (3-2-1 rows) at opposite ends of a table. A dining table or kitchen counter works — anything flat and roughly 1.5 to 2 metres long.
- Fill each glass with prosecco, cava, or whatever sparkling wine you've got. About two-thirds full is the sweet spot — enough to make the stakes real, not so much that every shot turns into a puddle.
- Divide into 2 teams. Each team stands behind their triangle, facing the opponent's glasses.
- Take turns throwing the pink ping-pong balls across the table, aiming to land one in an opponent's glass. One throw per player per turn.
- When a ball lands in a glass, the defending team drinks the contents of that glass and removes it from the formation.
- The first team to clear all 6 of their opponent's glasses wins. Losers finish whatever's left on their own side — house rules apply.
- Rinse the glasses, refill, and set up again. With 3 balls included, you've always got a spare when one inevitably rolls under the sofa.
Sensory Notes and Honest Observations
The glasses are thin-walled, almost weightless party plastic with a slight flex when squeezed — they look convincing from across a room but nobody will mistake them for real glassware up close, which is exactly the point for a game that involves bouncing balls at them. They hold roughly 150 ml comfortably, and the narrow flute shape means balls that land cleanly tend to stay put rather than bouncing back out.
The pink ping-pong balls are standard 40mm size — same as regulation table tennis balls but in a colour that's slightly easier to spot when it bounces off the table and rolls behind a speaker. They bounce predictably on hard surfaces. On a tablecloth, you'll get a dead drop, which some players actually prefer because it makes the game harder. Experiment with both.
Honest limitation: 12 glasses means exactly one game's worth per setup. If you're hosting a tournament with multiple teams rotating in, you'll want to get a second set so you're not constantly resetting. For a casual evening with 4 to 8 people, a single set does the job. The glasses also won't survive being stepped on — pack them back in the box between uses if you want them to last more than one party.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use drinks other than prosecco?
Absolutely. Cava, champagne, sparkling water with a splash of something, beer, cider — anything goes. The glasses are just plastic flutes, so they'll hold whatever you pour. The prosecco branding is a suggestion, not a rule.
How many people can play prosecco pong?
The standard setup is 2 teams, so a minimum of 2 players. Most groups run 2 to 4 per side. Larger groups can rotate in after each round — losers step out, next team steps up.
Are the plastic prosecco glasses reusable?
Yes. Give them a rinse between rounds and they're good to go again. They're lightweight party plastic — not built for the dishwasher, but sturdy enough for multiple uses if you don't crush them underfoot.
What size table do I need for prosecco pong?
Anything around 1.5 to 2 metres long works well. A standard dining table or kitchen island is spot on. Shorter tables make the game easier; longer ones add challenge and drama.
Is this a good gift for a hen party or birthday?
It's one of the best low-cost party gifts going. Fits in a gift bag, needs zero explanation, and gets people playing within 5 minutes of opening. We've sold stacks of these as hen do and birthday presents — they always land well.
Do the ping-pong balls bounce well on all surfaces?
On a hard table, yes — they bounce predictably. On a tablecloth or soft surface, the bounce dies and the ball tends to drop straight. Some players prefer the dead-drop style, so try both and see what your group likes.
Where can I buy a prosecco pong drinking game?
You can order this prosecco pong drinking game directly from Azarius with free EU shipping. We keep it stocked year-round in our Party Games category alongside other drinking games like Drinking Ludo and Beer Pong sets.
Last updated: April 2026










