What's Brewing Nicely

What has been going well and tastes great?

Our release went out without a single hotfix — smooth as a freshly poured pint.
Pairing sessions really helped onboard the new team members quickly.
Daily standups have been tight and energising lately.
What Left a Bad Taste

What went wrong or felt sour this time around?

Too many last-minute scope changes threw off our planning.
The flaky test suite kept blocking our merges.
Meetings ran long and ate into focus time.
Ingredients to Add

What should we mix in to brew a better batch next time?

Let's introduce a mid-sprint check-in to catch issues earlier.
We should agree on a definition of done before starting work.
Block out two hours of no-meeting focus time each morning.
Raise a Toast

Who or what deserves a celebratory cheers this round?

Cheers to Sam for jumping in to fix the production issue over the weekend.
A toast to the whole team for staying calm under the deadline pressure.
Big thanks to Priya for documenting the onboarding process so well.

What is the Oktoberfest Brewfest Retrospective

Gather your team around the metaphorical beer hall and celebrate the season with a retrospective that brings the spirit of Oktoberfest to your reflection. Inspired by the world's largest folk festival in Munich, this themed format uses the imagery of brewing, toasting, and harvest to help teams pause, look back, and look ahead in a festive and relaxed atmosphere. It's a playful twist on the traditional sprint or project review, perfect for keeping engagement high during the autumn months. The Oktoberfest Brewfest Retrospective works by guiding participants through a series of beer-themed prompts that map onto familiar retrospective questions. What's been brewing nicely (going well)? What left a bad taste (problems)? What ingredients do we need next time (improvements)? And what should we raise a toast to (celebrations and shout-outs)? This structure makes it easy for everyone to contribute, lowers the barrier to honest feedback, and adds a sense of fun that encourages even quieter team members to join in. By blending celebration with genuine reflection, this template helps teams build psychological safety, recognise wins, and surface improvement opportunities in a memorable way. Whether you're closing out a sprint, wrapping up a quarter, or simply marking the festive season together, the Oktoberfest Brewfest format turns routine retrospectives into something your team will look forward to. Prost!

Oktoberfest Brewfest retrospective format

What's Brewing Nicely

What has been going well and tastes great?

This is the 'what went well' prompt dressed in Oktoberfest colours. Encourage the team to celebrate the things that have been fermenting beautifully — successful deliveries, smooth collaboration, healthy habits. Keep the tone upbeat and make sure everyone gets a chance to pour in their thoughts before moving on.

What Left a Bad Taste

What went wrong or felt sour this time around?

This is the 'what didn't go well' prompt. Create a safe, blame-free space so people feel comfortable naming the things that soured the experience. Focus on situations and processes rather than individuals, and look for patterns that the team can address together.

Ingredients to Add

What should we mix in to brew a better batch next time?

This is the 'what to improve' prompt. Steer the team toward concrete, actionable ideas rather than vague wishes. Encourage people to suggest experiments they'd like to try, and connect each ingredient to a problem raised earlier so improvements feel grounded and purposeful.

Raise a Toast

Who or what deserves a celebratory cheers this round?

This is the appreciation and shout-out prompt. End the retrospective on a high note by inviting the team to recognise each other's contributions and celebrate shared wins. Genuine recognition builds morale and reinforces the positive behaviours you want to see more of. Prost!

When to use this retrospective

  • When you want to add a festive, seasonal twist to your end-of-sprint or end-of-quarter review during the autumn months.
  • When team morale needs a lift and you want reflection to feel fun and low-pressure.
  • When onboarding new members and looking for a relaxed format that encourages everyone to contribute.
  • When celebrating a major milestone or release and you want to balance recognition with honest improvement.
  • When your usual retrospective format feels stale and you need something fresh to re-energise the team.

Suggested icebreaker questions

  • If your last sprint were a beer, what kind would it be and why?
  • What's one festive tradition you'd love to bring into your team's culture?

Ideas and tips for your retrospective meeting

  • Lean into the theme — use beer and festival imagery in your prompts and intro to set a relaxed, playful mood that loosens people up.
  • Timebox each topic so the festive fun doesn't crowd out the actionable discussion; aim for balanced contribution across all four areas.
  • Make sure the 'What Left a Bad Taste' section stays blame-free by focusing on processes and situations rather than individuals.
  • Always close with the 'Raise a Toast' appreciation round so the session ends on a genuinely positive, morale-boosting note.
  • Encourage quieter members to add their thoughts anonymously first, then group and vote to keep the discussion inclusive.
  • Turn the top improvement ideas into clear action items with owners so the good intentions don't go flat after the meeting.

Frequently asked questions

What is an Oktoberfest Brewfest Retrospective?
It's a fun, themed retrospective that uses beer and festival imagery to guide a team through reflection. Prompts like 'What's brewing nicely' and 'What left a bad taste' map onto familiar retrospective questions in a festive way.
When should I use this themed retrospective?
It's ideal for the autumn season, end-of-sprint or end-of-quarter reviews, milestone celebrations, or any time your team's usual retrospective format needs a morale-boosting refresh.
How long does an Oktoberfest Brewfest Retrospective take?
Most sessions run between 45 and 60 minutes, depending on team size. Timebox each of the four topics to keep the energy high and leave room for action items.
How is it different from a standard sprint retrospective?
The structure is the same — celebrate wins, surface problems, plan improvements, and recognise contributions — but the playful Oktoberfest theme lowers the barrier to honest feedback and makes the session more engaging.
Is this retrospective suitable for remote teams?
Yes. In TeamRetro everyone can contribute their ideas in parallel, group similar themes, vote on what matters most, and capture action items, making it just as effective for distributed teams as in-person ones.
Do participants need to know anything about Oktoberfest?
Not at all. The theme is light and intuitive, and the prompts are self-explanatory, so anyone can join in and enjoy the festive framing regardless of their familiarity with the festival.

New to retrospectives? Read our guide on how to run a retrospective →