Friends-only mode
House rules (keep it friendly)
The goal is laughs, not “gotcha” moments. If you want bigger chaos, increase the silliness—not the risk.
Rules everyone agrees to
- Anyone can pass with zero explanation.
- No dares that isolate, insult, or embarrass someone publicly.
- No touching dares. Keep it clean and silly.
- No filming or posting without everyone’s permission.
- If someone says “stop,” the dare ends immediately.
- If the room gets awkward: switch prompt → move on.
Rule that saves games: passing is normal. If your group treats “pass” like a problem, the game becomes peer pressure instead of fun.
Truths (funny, not cruel)
What’s your most unhinged “I thought this would work” idea?
What’s the worst haircut you ever had?
What’s the funniest thing you believed as a kid?
If you had to eat one food forever, what is it?
What’s your most-used emoji (be honest)?
What’s your most controversial “this movie is overrated” opinion?
What’s a skill you wish you had for no reason?
If you could rename yourself, what would you pick?
What’s the most random thing in your camera roll right now?
What’s a small pet peeve that makes you irrationally mad?
What’s the most awkward thing you’ve said on autopilot?
What’s your “I peaked in middle school” moment?
Dares (chaos, safe)
Do your best celebrity impression for 20 seconds.
Speak only in questions until your next turn.
Let the group pick a word. Create a 10-second commercial for it.
Do a 30-second dramatic reading of the nearest text you can find.
Switch seats with someone using only “mime” instructions.
Do 10 squats while maintaining intense eye contact with the wall.
Invent a new handshake with the person to your left.
Pretend you’re a news anchor reporting on “the snack situation.”
Do your best animal sound. The group guesses.
Try to balance a book on your head for 10 seconds.
Talk in a fake accent for one round (nothing offensive).
Create a “team chant” and get everyone to repeat it once.
Hosting tips (anti-awkward)
What to do if the vibe dips
- Switch to “two truths only” for 3 rounds.
- Do a reset round: everyone shares one compliment for the person on their right.
- Use shorter dares (10–20 seconds) to keep momentum.
- If someone is quiet: give them a soft pass and keep it moving.
Sources
- Common Sense Education: peer pressure can influence decisions and can be amplified by group dynamics. View source
- Planned Parenthood: consent basics (if someone says no / says nothing / seems unsure, you don’t have consent). View source