Strip Rock-paper-scissors - Police Edition -fin... 〈Browser〉
Disclaimer: This guide is designed for adults engaging in consensual, playful tabletop or party games. Always establish boundaries and a safe word before beginning.
Traditional Strip Rock-Paper-Scissors is purely erotic or comedic. The Police Edition injects authority symbolism. Costumes — badges, uniforms, handcuffs, gloves — represent power and order. Removing them symbolizes loss of control. By the time players reach the Fin, they are stripped of hierarchical pretense, forced to compete as equals in vulnerable states.
Moreover, the Interrogation phase mimics real power shifts. In law enforcement, the interrogator controls the room. In this game, the winner of each throw seizes that role — for one question only. It’s a democratic, chaotic, and strangely revealing form of role-reversal.
The game reportedly began as a hazing ritual in a small-town police precinct in the late 1980s. Officers, bored during long night shifts, would play Rock-Paper-Scissors to settle minor disputes like who had to file paperwork or who took the next call. Someone jokingly suggested that the loser remove a piece of uniform — a hat, a badge, a tie.
From there, it evolved. The “Police Edition” rules were codified in the early 2000s by an anonymous former detective known only as “The Arbitrator,” who published a digital manifesto titled “Hand Signals and Handcuffs: The Official Guide to Strip Rock-Paper-Scissors - Police Edition.” Strip Rock-Paper-Scissors - Police Edition -Fin...
The “Fin” (Final) stage became legendary after a viral (but now-deleted) video from an underground gaming tournament in 2018, where two participants — one dressed as a state trooper, one as a detective — played a 47-round marathon ending in a dramatic, almost cinematic conclusion.
The -Fin... at the end of your title suggests a conclusion—likely in a short story or video. Here are three ways this could end:
The most famous Strip Rock-Paper-Scissors - Police Edition - Final occurred at an illegal gaming den called “The Precinct” in Baltimore. Two legends faced off:
The stakes: The loser would donate $10,000 to a charity of the winner’s choice and retire from competitive strip-gaming forever. Disclaimer: This guide is designed for adults engaging
Rounds 1–20: Both players retained most clothing. Bluffs became absurdly complex. (“If you throw Scissors, I’ll throw Rock, but I lied earlier when I said I always open with Rock.”)
Rounds 21–35: Interrogation phase grew brutal. Miranda admitted to falsifying a report in 2009 (jokingly, but the crowd gasped). No-Knack revealed he once used a fake badge to skip a DMV line. Clothing decreased.
Round 40: Fin begins. Miranda is in a tank top and cargo pants. No-Knock is in a torn tactical vest and one boot.
Round 45: Tied 2-2 in the final set. Crowd silent. The game reportedly began as a hazing ritual
Round 46: Miranda throws Scissors. No-Knock throws Rock. No-Knock wins. Miranda must remove her tank top (last top item) and perform an evidence disposal. She tears a fake warrant.
Round 47 (Final Final): Miranda, down to her sports bra and pants, stares at No-Knock. He smirks. He announces, “Paper.” She whispers, “You’re bluffing.” She throws Scissors. He throws Rock — again. He wasn’t bluffing.
Post-Fin: No-Knock invoked the Handcuff Clause. Miranda knelt. He read a humorous Miranda warning: “You have the right to remain embarrassed. Anything you disrobe can and will be used against you in the court of public opinion.” She laughed, paid the $10k to a children’s literacy fund, and retired.
That Final remains the gold standard of the game.