Trivia Host Script Template: Fill-in-the-Blanks for Your Next Trivia Night

Quick Answer

A trivia host script template is a fill-in-the-blanks guide that covers your entire trivia night from opening welcome to final goodbye. It includes scripted transitions between rounds, score announcements, rules explanations, banter to keep energy high, and contingency lines for handling disruptions. The best templates use bracketed placeholders like [VENUE NAME] so you can customize them in minutes and use them tonight.

This article gives you a complete, ready-to-copy template that covers a full 2-hour trivia night. Print it out, fill in the blanks, and you are ready to host.

1. Why You Need a Trivia Host Script

When I hosted my first trivia night, I walked in with nothing but a stack of questions and misplaced confidence. I figured I could wing it. I was the funny guy at parties, after all. How hard could it be?

Twenty minutes in, I had stumbled through the rules, forgotten to mention the wagering format, killed three minutes of dead air trying to remember what round came next, and lost half the room to their phones. The teams that stayed were confused about scoring. One table argued for five minutes about whether their half-right answer should count. I had no plan for any of it.

That night taught me the most important lesson in trivia hosting: winging it is not a strategy. A great trivia host makes the night look effortless. But that effortlessness comes from preparation. A script is your safety net, your pacing guide, and your secret weapon all in one.

Here is what a good trivia host script does for you:

  • Eliminates dead air. You always know exactly what to say next, so there are no awkward pauses while you figure out your next move.
  • Keeps the night on schedule. A scripted pacing plan keeps your 2-hour night from ballooning into 3 hours. Players have jobs in the morning.
  • Ensures you cover the rules. Every host forgets a key rule at some point. A script makes sure the wagering format, scoring system, and tiebreaker policy all get explained.
  • Makes you sound polished. When you are not fumbling for words, you come across as confident and professional. Players trust a host who has their act together.
  • Gives you a plan for problems. Late arrivals, disputed answers, microphone failures, a team that keeps shouting out answers. A script with contingency lines means you are never caught off guard.

Think of your script like a flight plan. Pilots do not take off and figure it out as they go. They have a checklist, a route, and backup procedures. Your trivia night deserves the same level of preparation. The template below gives you that flight plan. All you have to do is fill in the blanks.

Before you dive in, make sure you have read our guide on how to be a good trivia host for the foundational skills that make this script come alive.

2. Opening Script Template: The First 5 Minutes

Your opening sets the tone for the entire night. A strong opening makes players feel welcome, explains what to expect, and builds anticipation for the first question. A weak opening confuses people and kills the energy before you have even asked a question.

Below is a fill-in-the-blanks opening script. Replace everything in [BRACKETS] with your venue and event details.

[Walk to the microphone. Pause 2 seconds. Smile. Make eye contact with the room.]

"Good evening, everybody! Welcome to [VENUE NAME] for [NIGHT OF WEEK] Trivia! I am [YOUR NAME], and I will be your host tonight."

[Pause for applause or cheers. If the room is quiet, push through with energy.]

"Tonight we have [NUMBER] rounds of trivia covering everything from [CATEGORY EXAMPLE 1] to [CATEGORY EXAMPLE 2] to [CATEGORY EXAMPLE 3]. Each round has [NUMBER] questions, and the questions get tougher as the rounds go on."

[Hold up an answer sheet or point to where they are.]

"Here is how it works. You will write your answers on the sheets I am about to hand out. One sheet per team, team name at the top. I cannot stress this enough: [YOUR NAME] cannot read your mind, so if there is no team name, you are playing for pride and pride alone."

[Pause for laughter or groans.]

"We play [NUMBER] rounds tonight. Rounds [LIST] are worth [X] point each. Round [FINAL ROUND NUMBER] is our final wager round, where you can bet up to [MAX POINTS] points. That means no lead is safe and no deficit is insurmountable."

[Make eye contact with a team in the back.]

"Cell phones stay face-down. I know, I know. But if I see a phone out during a round, I will assume you are Googling, and your team gets zero for that round. I do not want to be the bad guy, but I will be the bad guy. The good news? You get to be the bad guy between rounds while you grade your neighbors' answers."

[Point to the prize area or hold up the prize.]

"Tonight's winning team takes home [PRIZE DESCRIPTION]. Second place gets [2ND PLACE PRIZE]. And if you are not in first or second, stick around anyway, because I have been known to hand out random bonus points for creative wrong answers."

[Build energy for the final line.]

"All right, teams. Get your pens ready, get your brains firing, and come up with a team name that will make me laugh, make me blush, or at least make me remember who you are. Round One starts in about two minutes. Welcome to [VENUE NAME] Trivia!"

Pro Tip: Practice your opening out loud at least three times before the event. Time yourself. If it runs longer than 5 minutes, trim it. Players came to answer questions, not listen to a monologue.

3. Between-Round Banter Template: Keeping the Energy Alive

The space between rounds is where good hosts separate themselves from great ones. Anyone can read questions off a page. The magic happens in the transitions. This is where you build relationships with your players, create running jokes, and keep the room buzzing while answer sheets circulate.

Use the template below for each between-round break. Rotate through the different banter types so it does not feel repetitive.

[Collect answer sheets. Give the room 10-15 seconds of music or quiet while you quickly sort.]

"Okay! Answer sheets are in. While I get these sorted, let me hear from some teams. Team in the [LOCATION IN ROOM]... how did that round treat you?"

[Listen to their response. React genuinely. Move on quickly.]

"I will trade results in a minute. While we grade, here is a quick reminder: phones away when Round [NEXT ROUND] starts. I have got my eyes everywhere. I am basically a very low-budget surveillance camera."

[While teams trade sheets, walk around the room. Make eye contact with a few tables.]

"While you are grading, I want to shout out the team name that made me laugh the hardest tonight: [FUNNY TEAM NAME]. Five bonus points for making my night. Use them wisely."

[After 2-3 minutes of grading, regain attention.]

"All right, sheets back to the original teams. If you see any grading disputes, settle them like adults... or rock-paper-scissors. I do not judge. Now, scores after [X] rounds..."

Alternative Banter Options (Rotate These)

Do not use the same between-round material every time. Mix and match from this list:

  • The Poll: "Quick show of hands... who thinks they aced that round?" Wait for hands. "Who is just hoping for partial credit?" Use the responses to riff for 30 seconds.
  • The Teaser: "Next round is all about [CATEGORY]. I have already had one team tell me they majored in this. No pressure, but I will be watching your table very closely."
  • The Callback: Reference something funny a team said earlier in the night. "Team [NAME] is still arguing about whether their answer counted. It did not. But I respect the confidence."
  • The Trivia Fact: Share a short, interesting fact related to the upcoming round. "Before we dive into music trivia, here is a fun fact: the shortest hit song ever to reach number one was only 1 minute and 42 seconds. Round [X] will feel longer than that, but I promise it will be worth it."

4. Score Announcement Script: Building Suspense

Announcing scores is not just reading numbers. It is a performance. The way you reveal scores determines whether teams stay engaged or mentally check out. A team in last place needs to believe a comeback is possible. A team in first needs to feel the pressure. Your delivery makes that happen.

[Pause for dramatic effect. Make eye contact with the room. Lower your voice slightly.]

"Scores are in. After [X] rounds, here is where we stand."

[Start from the bottom and work up for maximum drama.]

"In [LAST PLACE POSITION] place with [SCORE] points... [TEAM NAME]. Do not panic. I have seen bigger comebacks in this room."

"In [NEXT POSITION] place with [SCORE] points... [TEAM NAME]. Solid work. You are right in the mix."

[Build tension. Pause before the top two.]

"And now, the top two. In second place with [SCORE] points... [TEAM NAME]. You are within striking distance. One big wager round could change everything."

[Longest pause of the night. Look at the leading team.]

"And your current leaders, with [SCORE] points... [TEAM NAME]! Enjoy it while it lasts. Everyone else has a target on your back."

[Step back from the mic. Let the room react.]

"There are [X] rounds to go. Anything can happen. Round [NEXT ROUND] starts in 60 seconds."

Pro Tip: Never announce scores in a monotone. Vary your pace, pitch, and volume. The bottom-of-the-pack teams should get a little encouragement. The top teams should feel the heat. Make it feel like a game show, not a board meeting.

5. Final Round Setup Script: The Wager Round

The final round is where legends are made and leads are lost. A poorly explained wager round creates confusion, arguments, and frustrated players. A well-explained wager round creates the most exciting 15 minutes of the night. Your script needs to be crystal clear.

[Change your tone. This is the big moment. Lower the music.]

"Ladies and gentlemen... it is time for the final round. This is where everything changes."

[Hold up the final round sheet.]

"Here is how the wager round works. Before you hear the questions, your team will decide how many points to wager. You can bet anywhere from zero to [MAX WAGER] points. If you answer the question correctly, you ADD those points to your score. If you answer wrong, you LOSE those points."

[Slow down. Repeat the key rule.]

"Let me say that again because this is important: a wrong answer costs you the points you wagered. So if you have 20 points and you wager all 20 and you get it wrong... you now have zero. I am not trying to scare you. I am just trying to prevent a very awkward conversation at the end of the night."

[Demonstrate with the scoreboard or a verbal example.]

"Let us say you have 35 points right now. You can play it safe and wager 5. Or you can go all-in and wager 20. The choice is yours. Write your wager in the box at the top of your answer sheet before I read the question. Once the question is read, wagers are locked. No changes."

[Look around the room. Lock eyes with the leading team, then with a trailing team.]

"Current standings: [LEADING TEAM] is in first with [SCORE]. [TRAILING TEAM] is in last with [SCORE]. A smart wager from any team in this room can change everything. That is not motivational fluff. That is math."

[Pause. Let the tension build.]

"Write your wagers now. I will give you 30 seconds. When you are ready, look up at me and try to hide the terror in your eyes."

[Count down. Then read the final question slowly and clearly.]

"Wagers are locked. Here is your final question..."

6. Winner Announcement and Closing Script

The closing is your last impression. It determines whether players come back next week. A great closing celebrates the winners, respects the losers, thanks the venue, and leaves everyone excited for the next event. Do not rush it. Do not wing it. Use the script.

[Wait until all final answer sheets are collected and scored. Build anticipation.]

"All right. Final scores are calculated. The wager round has done its damage. Some of you are heroes. Some of you are... learning experiences. Let us find out which is which."

[Start with honorable mentions.]

"Before we get to the winners, I want to give a shout-out to [TEAM NAME] for the best wrong answer of the night. When I asked [QUESTION TOPIC], you wrote [FUNNY WRONG ANSWER]. That is not correct. But it is now my favorite answer of all time. Five bonus points for creativity."

[Build to the winner.]

"In third place tonight, with [SCORE] points... [TEAM NAME]! Come grab your [3RD PLACE PRIZE]. Solid performance."

"In second place, with [SCORE] points... [TEAM NAME]! So close. You get [2ND PLACE PRIZE]. Hold your head high."

[Long pause. Make eye contact with the top two teams.]

"And your [VENUE NAME] Trivia champions for [DATE], with a final score of [SCORE] points... [WINNING TEAM NAME]!"

[Let the room applaud. Hand over the prize. Wait for the moment to land.]

"[WINNING TEAM], come claim your prize! Everyone else, start studying. They have a target on their backs next week."

[Shift to a warm, grateful tone for the close.]

"Thank you all for coming out tonight. Seriously. Whether you won, lost, or are still arguing about that one question in Round Two, you made this night what it was. Trivia is only fun because of the people in this room, and you are the best group a host could ask for."

"Big thanks to [VENUE NAME] for hosting us, to [STAFF MEMBER] for keeping the drinks flowing, and to every single one of you for putting your phones down for two hours."

"We do this every [NIGHT OF WEEK] at [START TIME]. Same time, same place, same host, totally different questions. Bring your friends. Bring your enemies. Bring that one person who thinks they are smarter than everyone else. We will see you then. Have a great night, everybody!"

Want More Trivia Hosting Tips?

Get practical advice on hosting smoother, more engaging trivia nights. Check out our complete guide to becoming a great trivia host.

Read: How to Be a Good Trivia Host

7. Handling Common Situations: Contingency Scripts

Every trivia night throws something unexpected at you. The difference between a pro and a beginner is not that pros avoid problems. It is that pros know exactly what to say when problems happen. Below are scripted responses for the most common situations you will face.

Late Arrivals (During an Active Round)

[When a new group walks in mid-round, pause briefly. Welcome them warmly. Do not make them feel awkward.]

"Welcome, welcome! You are just in time for Round [CURRENT ROUND]. Grab a table, pick a team name, and I will get you an answer sheet. You are joining us at question [NUMBER], so you have missed [X] questions, but you are absolutely still in the game. Do not let the early start scare you. I have seen teams join late and still take home the prize."

Hand them a sheet quietly. Do not replay missed questions. Let them know after the round that they can still compete for the remaining rounds and explain the scoring so they understand their position.

Answer Disputes

[Stay calm. Do not get defensive. Your job is to be fair, not to win the argument.]

"Okay, let me hear it. Team [NAME], what is your argument?"

[Listen to their case.]

"That is a fair point. Here is what I am going with: [YOUR RULING WITH EXPLANATION]. I know not everyone will agree, but that is the call for tonight. I am happy to revisit the question after the event if you want to send me sources. Fair enough?"

Pro Tip: Never change a ruling after you have announced it unless you discover you were factually wrong. Changing your mind mid-game undermines your authority. If you were wrong, own it, fix it, apologize, and move on. Players respect honesty more than stubbornness.

Technical Issues (Microphone, Sound, Projector)

[If the mic cuts out, do not panic. Project confidence.]

"Well, folks, it looks like our microphone has decided to take a five-minute break. The good news is I have a theater degree and a very loud voice. The bad news is... actually, there is no bad news. I am going to project from right here while [STAFF MEMBER] works some tech magic. Question [NUMBER]..."

If the projector fails during a picture round, describe the images verbally. If the sound system dies, use your natural voice. If the Wi-Fi goes down and you need digital questions, have a printed backup ready. The show goes on, always.

Teams Calling Out Answers

"Okay, pause. I love the enthusiasm. I really do. But if answers get called out, nobody gets points for that question. That includes the team that shouted it and every team that heard it. I do not want to be the fun police, so I am going to pretend that did not happen. But the next time an answer leaves someone's mouth before sheets are in, that question is dead for everybody. Fair?"

A Team Wants to Change Their Answer After Handing In

"I hear you, but once that sheet leaves your table, it is locked in. I have to be consistent with every team. If I let one team change, I have to let everyone change, and then we are here until midnight. Your answer stands. But hey, there are [X] more questions to make up for it."

8. Customizing Your Script for Your Venue

The template above is your starting point, not your finished product. Every venue has its own personality, its own crowd, and its own culture. Your script needs to reflect that. Here is how to make this template feel like it was written specifically for your room.

Match Your Tone to the Venue

A sports bar on a Friday night needs a different energy than a quiet brewery on a Tuesday. A family-friendly restaurant needs cleaner jokes than a college pub. Pay attention to the room and adjust:

  • Sports bars: Keep it fast, loud, and competitive. Use sports metaphors. Reference local teams.
  • Breweries and taprooms: Keep it relaxed and conversational. Beer jokes land well. The crowd is usually older and more laid-back.
  • College bars: Keep energy high, references current, and expect a rowdier crowd.
  • Family restaurants: Keep it clean, inclusive, and encouraging. Celebrate participation, not just winning.
  • Corporate events: Keep it professional but fun. Inside jokes about the company work well. Avoid anything edgy.

Personalize the Fill-Ins

Fill in every bracketed field before you arrive. Do not wait until you are at the microphone. Know the venue name, the staff member you will thank, the prize descriptions, and the round format. The more prepared you are, the more natural you will sound.

Pre-Event Script Checklist

  • Venue name confirmed
  • Staff member to thank identified
  • Prize descriptions written down
  • Round format and point values memorized
  • Funny team name from a previous week picked for callback
  • One local reference or current event joke prepared
  • Contingency lines printed or memorized
  • Timing notes added (where to pause, where to build suspense)
  • Script practiced out loud at least once

Build Running Jokes

The best trivia hosts have recurring bits that regular players look forward to. Maybe you always make fun of a particular team name format. Maybe you have a signature sign-off. Maybe you give a ridiculous bonus point category every week. Whatever it is, make it yours. A personalized script becomes a signature, and a signature makes you memorable.

9. Delivery Tips: Pace, Tone, and Energy

A perfect script delivered poorly is worse than no script at all. How you say something matters just as much as what you say. Here are the delivery techniques that separate amateur hosts from professionals.

Control Your Pace

New hosts almost always go too fast. Nervous energy makes you rush through questions, gabble through transitions, and skip over jokes that need a beat to land. Force yourself to slow down. A good pace for reading questions is about 100 words per minute. That feels almost too slow when you are at the microphone, but to the audience it sounds confident and clear.

Between rounds, you can speed up slightly. During the opening and the wager round, slow down. Silence is your friend. A two-second pause before announcing the winner builds more tension than any words you could say.

Vary Your Tone

Monotone hosts put rooms to sleep. Vary your pitch, volume, and speed throughout the night:

  • Opening: Upbeat, welcoming, high energy. You are setting the mood.
  • Rules: Slightly more serious. Clear and authoritative. Players need to hear and remember this.
  • Questions: Steady and clear. Enunciate. Repeat if necessary.
  • Banter: Conversational and playful. Match the room's energy.
  • Score announcements: Dramatic. Build suspense with your voice.
  • Closing: Warm and grateful. End on a high note.

Manage Your Energy

A 2-hour trivia night is a marathon, not a sprint. If you blow all your energy in the first 20 minutes, you will crash by round four. Pace yourself:

  • Start strong but not at 100%. Reserve some energy for the final rounds.
  • Use the between-round breaks to breathe, sip water, and reset.
  • When you feel yourself flagging, amp up the music or walk around the room. Physical movement boosts your energy.
  • If the crowd is flat, your energy needs to go up. If the crowd is buzzing, you can relax and ride their momentum.

Make Eye Contact

The microphone is not your audience. The people in the room are. Look up from your script. Make eye contact with different tables throughout the night. When you are telling a joke, look at one specific team. When you are explaining rules, scan the room to make sure people are listening. Eye contact creates connection, and connection is what makes players come back.

Pro Tip: Print your script in a large, easy-to-read font. Use bold for your lines and italics for stage directions. Highlight key transitions with a marker. The easier your script is to read at a glance, the more eye contact you can make with the room.

New to Trivia Hosting?

Before you script your night, make sure you know the fundamentals. Our step-by-step guide covers everything from your first event to building a regular crowd.

Read: How to Host a Trivia Night

10. Complete Sample Script: A Filled-In Example

Below is the entire template filled in for a fictional trivia night at a venue called Murphy's Pub. Use this as a model for how your completed script should look.

=== MURPHY'S PUB TRIVIA NIGHT - COMPLETE SCRIPT ===

=== OPENING ===

[Walk to the mic. Pause. Smile.]

"Good evening, everybody! Welcome to Murphy's Pub for Wednesday Night Trivia! I am Dave, and I will be your host tonight."

"Tonight we have five rounds of trivia covering everything from history to pop culture to science. Each round has ten questions, and the questions get tougher as the rounds go on."

"Here is how it works. You will write your answers on the sheets I am about to hand out. One sheet per team, team name at the top. I cannot stress this enough: Dave cannot read your mind, so if there is no team name, you are playing for pride and pride alone."

"We play five rounds tonight. Rounds One through Four are worth one point each. Round Five is our final wager round, where you can bet up to twenty points. That means no lead is safe and no deficit is insurmountable."

"Cell phones stay face-down. I know, I know. But if I see a phone out during a round, I will assume you are Googling, and your team gets zero for that round. The good news? You get to grade your neighbors' answers between rounds."

"Tonight's winning team takes home a $50 Murphy's Pub gift card. Second place gets a round of appetizers. And if you are not in first or second, stick around anyway, because I hand out bonus points for creative wrong answers."

"All right, teams. Get your pens ready, get your brains firing, and come up with a team name that will make me laugh. Round One starts in two minutes. Welcome to Murphy's Pub Trivia!"

=== BETWEEN ROUNDS (Example: After Round 2) ===

"Okay! Answer sheets are in. While I get these sorted, let me hear from some teams. Team in the corner... how did Round Two treat you?"

"I will trade results in a minute. While we grade, quick reminder: phones away when Round Three starts. I have got my eyes everywhere."

"While you are grading, shout-out to the team name that made me laugh tonight: 'Quizteama Aguilera.' Five bonus points. Use them wisely."

"All right, sheets back. Scores after two rounds..."

=== SCORE ANNOUNCEMENT (After Round 3) ===

"Scores are in. After three rounds, here is where we stand. In fourth place with 18 points... The Fact Hunters. Do not panic. I have seen bigger comebacks."

"In third place with 22 points... Quizteama Aguilera. Solid work."

"In second place with 25 points... The Brain Trust. You are within striking distance."

"And your current leaders, with 28 points... The Know-It-Alls! Enjoy it while it lasts."

"Two rounds to go. Anything can happen. Round Four starts in 60 seconds."

=== FINAL ROUND SETUP ===

"Ladies and gentlemen... it is time for the final round. This is where everything changes."

"Here is how the wager round works. Before you hear the questions, your team decides how many points to wager. You can bet anywhere from zero to twenty points. Correct answers add those points. Wrong answers lose those points."

"If you have 20 points and you wager all 20 and get it wrong... you now have zero. I am not trying to scare you. I am just preventing an awkward conversation later."

"Current standings: The Know-It-Alls lead with 28. The Fact Hunters are in last with 18. A smart wager changes everything. Write your wagers now. 30 seconds."

"Wagers are locked. Here is your final question..."

=== CLOSING ===

"All right. Final scores are calculated. Before we get to the winners, shout-out to The Brain Trust for the best wrong answer of the night. When I asked for the capital of Australia, you wrote 'Kangaroo City.' That is not correct. But it is now my favorite answer of all time. Five bonus points."

"In third place with 24 points... The Fact Hunters!"

"In second place with 29 points... The Know-It-Alls! So close."

"And your Murphy's Pub Trivia champions for tonight, with 31 points... Quizteama Aguilera! Come claim your $50 gift card!"

"Thank you all for coming out tonight. Whether you won, lost, or are still arguing about that geography question, you made this night what it was. Big thanks to Murphy's Pub and Sarah for keeping the drinks flowing. We do this every Wednesday at 7 PM. Same time, same place, totally different questions. See you then!"

Key Takeaways: Your Script Success Checklist

Before you host your next trivia night, run through this final checklist. Every box you check makes you more prepared and your night more professional.

Before You Walk In the Door

  • Print your completed script with all [brackets] filled in
  • Highlight stage directions and key transitions
  • Practice the opening out loud at least 3 times
  • Time your opening. Keep it under 5 minutes
  • Prepare one local reference or current events joke
  • Know your contingency lines for disputes and tech issues
  • Confirm prize descriptions with venue staff
  • Bring a backup printed copy of your script
  • Have a printed copy of the rules for reference
  • Charge your microphone. Test it before the room fills

A trivia host script is not about being robotic. It is about being prepared so you can focus on what matters: connecting with your players, creating a fun atmosphere, and running a night people will remember. The script gives you the structure. Your personality brings it to life.

Now print this template, fill in the blanks, and go host an amazing trivia night.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should a trivia host script include?

A trivia host script should include an opening welcome, house rules explanation, round introductions, between-round banter, score announcements, a final round setup with wagering rules, winner announcements, and a closing thank-you. The best scripts also include contingency lines for handling late arrivals, disputes, and technical issues. This template covers all of those elements with fill-in-the-blank placeholders you can customize for any venue.

Should I memorize my trivia script or read it?

You should practice your script enough that you can deliver it naturally without reading word-for-word, but keep notes or cue cards as a safety net. Memorize the key beats (welcome, rules, transitions, closing) and use your script as a reference for specific wording. The goal is to sound conversational, not robotic. Think of it like a comedian's set list: they know the jokes, but they glance at the list to stay on track.

How long should a trivia host's opening script be?

A trivia host's opening script should be 3 to 5 minutes long. This gives you enough time to welcome everyone, introduce yourself, explain the rules, cover the format and scoring, mention prizes, and build excitement for the first round. If your opening runs longer than 5 minutes, players start getting restless. Keep it energetic but informative, then get to the first question.

Can I use the same script every week?

You can reuse the same script structure every week, but you should customize the content to keep it fresh. Rotate your jokes, update references to current events, acknowledge regular teams by name, and adjust your delivery to match the crowd's energy. A stale, robotic script will drive players away. The template is your foundation, but the details should change every week to keep things interesting.

How do I handle a team that argues with every answer?

Address it firmly but politely in the moment. Say something like, "I appreciate that you care about getting it right, and I am always happy to hear your case. But I need to keep the game moving, so I am making the call and we are moving on. If you want to send me sources after the event, I am happy to revisit it for next week." If the behavior continues week after week, pull them aside privately and let them know their disputes are affecting the experience for other teams. Most argumentative teams do not realize how they come across until you tell them.

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