An old favorite from my youth. My siblings and I would arrange in a circle, each with a slip of paper and a pencil. Questions would be posed in the order as above. After each reply, the paper would be folded to conceal ones entry and then passed to the person sitting to ones left, who would await the next question . Not knowing what was written prior, resulted in a very amusing finished product. Tradition demands the game always begin with [who lost it?] followed by [what did they lose?], and so on. Each time the queries cycle, they are altered, for instance [who found it?] [who offered a reward?] and so on until the game is called. Hope you enjoy it. -Falstaff
[Bm] The problem there is, if you read what's in the hide tags, you would appear to be disqualified from playing any further moves, because you know what's gone before. My suggestion, for what it's worth, is that we continue with the game as played above, and just treat it as a sort of "Missive Trellis"-style storytelling game, but with the who-what-when framework.
Why not instead of setting and aswering your own question, do it definition/jeopardy style: first player sets with second player answering then setting next question