The Squad Celebration event in Fall Guys offers a chaotic but thrilling experience packed with team-based minigames that demand equal parts strategy, communication, and sheer luck. While it’s always ideal to queue up with friends—ensuring coordination via voice comms—not everyone has that luxury. Whether you’re with a premade squad or relying on the matchmaking gods, this guide will help you make the most of every round and increase your odds of success.
Start Smart: Mindset and Team Dynamics
The first and perhaps most important mindset tip: you can’t control your teammates. What you can control is your own gameplay and how well you adapt to what’s happening. Try not to “carry” your team but instead play in a way that amplifies their strengths while compensating for their weaknesses. Observe their tendencies early and work around them. Flexibility in your role is crucial. If you’re the only one playing defense or griefing the opposition effectively, that alone might swing the match in your favor.
Full Ball: Aggressive Play with Calculated Defense
In Full Ball, keeping the pressure on your opponents while maintaining awareness of ball positioning is key. Early on, your instinct might be to rush the new ball or take heroic headers—but remember, coverage matters. One misjudged dive from a teammate can cost you the game, especially if they abandon the ball that’s already in motion to chase a fresh one.
The best approach here is to combine aggression with presence. Always try to head the ball in the same direction to maintain momentum. If you have the opportunity to block or slow a shot, use your body positioning smartly—even if that means sacrificing your own movement. Communicate if you can, but otherwise read the play and anticipate.
Snowy Scrap: Controlled Push and Tactical Griefing
This mode is about both pushing your own ball and preventing others from doing the same. Optimal team distribution involves two players pushing the snowball strategically, one controlling the direction, and one griefing opposing teams. If you’re that solo disruptor, your job is to make sure the opposing ball doesn’t make it to the high-snow areas or the boxing gloves that boost their accumulation rate.
Even a slightly mistimed dive can impact your control, but persistence pays off. Use your body mass to slow the ball, interrupt its flow, or even steer it into corners. Every second you delay another team gives your own more time to gather snow. When red won the round in the example, it wasn’t by brute force but by smart disruption.
Egg Scramble: Launch Tactics and Golden Egg Defense
Egg Scramble rewards early aggression and late-game defense. Begin by targeting the middle zone—grab an egg, jump, and dive in mid-air to launch it into your base. A key tactic is aiming for the hammer that swings toward your nest. If timed well, this tool can send eggs flying directly into the hopper.
Once you’ve built up a solid count of eggs, especially if you’ve snagged a golden one, shift to defense. Guard the golden egg like it’s your crown jewel. Holding it in your arms and bouncing between platforms makes it incredibly difficult for enemies to retrieve. If they try to grab it, the egg often gets launched, but if you’re smart and keep moving, they’ll waste valuable time chasing it down. Pro tip: don’t grief blindly—grab only when it disrupts enemy progress.
Tail Tag: Zone Control and Counterplay
Tail Tag is all about zone control and deception. Whether you start with a tail or not, your positioning matters more than your chase speed. The center platform is your early-game scouting ground. You can observe movement patterns and intercept enemies rather than aimlessly chasing them.
One subtle tactic involves grabbing players who also have tails in the hope a teammate swoops in. Keep an eye on hammer paths and use the top platform area for longer survival. Jumping and diving is your fail-safe for tight spots, though good timing is everything. Holding the high ground not only lets you see threats coming but gives you quick escape options via jumps and hammer boosts.
Power Trip: Efficiency Over Coverage
The goal here is to color tiles using batteries, but it’s not about sheer area—it’s about efficiency. Always aim to light up two tiles per movement when possible. Use a zigzagging motion or strafe wide turns to maximize coverage. Don’t waste time griefing players who don’t have batteries—target the real threats.
If you’re behind, cut through enemy zones and reclaim territory as fast as possible. Every battery counts, and every second matters. Poor team coordination can doom a run, but strategic reclaiming can make a huge difference.
Jinxed Final: The Art of Chaos and Control
Jinxed rounds are fast, chaotic, and nerve-wracking. If you’re not the one tagged initially, your job is to never be predictable. One of the best tricks is to fake being bad. Mess up a jump intentionally, hesitate at a ramp, or double back in an unexpected direction. Then, when you need to kick it into gear, you’ll surprise your pursuer.
Fans and edge platforms are your friends. Use them to maneuver unpredictably. Double-back moves are especially effective when opponents assume you’re fleeing in a linear path. If you’re the last few untagged players, become an assist—grab the enemy, delay them, create space for your teammates to close in.
Final Thoughts: Playing the Long Game
You won’t always get perfect teams in Squad Celebration. You won’t always win. But by understanding each mode’s unique mechanics and mastering your individual role, you can turn chaos into calculated victory. Adapt. Observe. Play with purpose.
And if you’re lucky enough to queue up with friends? Make those comms count. Good luck out there in the Blunderdome!




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