Cards Against Online

  1. Cards Against Humanity Online App

Amazon's Choice for cards against humanity online. Cards Against Humanity: Green Box. 4.8 out of 5 stars 13,103. Get it as soon as Mon, Feb 8. FREE Shipping on orders over $25 shipped by Amazon. Ages: 17 years and up. Cards Against Humanity: Hidden Gems Bundle. 4.8 out of 5 stars 7,687. Carbs Despite Quarantine is a Cards Against Humanity clone. It is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share-Alike 3.0 Licence. This site is in no way endorsed or sponsered by Cards Against Humanity. You can buy the original game at www.cardsagainsthumanity.com. Carbs Despite Quarantine is open source on GitHub. Cards Against Coronavirus An online, multiplayer version of Cards Against Humanity to help us pass the time during lockdown. Cards Against Humanity Lab is the official site for CAH online experience. However, it’s not exactly social since you’re the only one playing. Here, the computer deals you a black card, and you have a selection of white cards to choose the funniest answer from. There’s also an option to say none of the cards on the screen are funny at all.

30 March 2020, 12:40

Up to six people can play Cards Against Humanity on Playingcards.io – and you can even set up a voice or video call for extra laughs.

Since we've all been staying at home during the coronavirus quarantine, everyone has had to find creative ways of keeping busy and staying in touch with loved ones.

From using Netflix Party to host group viewing sessions of your fave TV shows, or downloading the Houseparty app and hosting quizzes, families and friendship groups have been doing all sorts of wholesome stuff to make sure they keep in contact.

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But enough of that wholesome content for a sec because there's a now way for the not-so-wholesome grown ups amongst us to have some fun too.

Fancy playing Cards Against Humanity with your mates? Well, now you can. Online. For free. And here's how to do it...

How to play Cards Against Humanity online

Playingcards.io, which is an online card game website, has multiple different games that you can play. One of those games is Cards Against Humanity.

If you don't know what Cards Against Humanity is, here's a quick explainer: Cards Against Humanity is 'a party game for horrible people'. Each round, one player asks a question from a black card, and everyone else answers with their funniest – and often offensive – white card. It's very much a game for adults and definitely not one to play with your parents. Unless your parents have the same level of questionable humour as you.

Anyway, once you click into the game on the site, you'll be able to create a virtual playing room. The site will give you a link, which you then send to your friends so they can join the game.

Up to six players can join the game, and you can even set up a voice or video call too, to get the full experience.

Much like if you've ever played Scrabble as a group on an iPad, the site allows everyone to see the game, but only you can see the cards in your hand.

There's many different ways to play Cards Against Humanity, but here's the basics:

Players start by selecting 10 white cards from the pile and dragging them to the bottom of the screen. Here, you will be able to see all your answer options. After every round, you should always have 10 cards in your hand.

Each round, one person becomes the judge. That person will select a black card. The first judge can be chosen based on any random thing you as a group decide – like whoever went to the toilet last. (Yes, those are really the rules.)

Once the judge has selected a black card, the other players will then choose their best white card, and drag it to the middle, ready to be judged.

The judge will then flip over those cards, read them out one by one and make their winning decision based on who was the funniest or most outrageous.

The winner of that round will then keep the black card. The person with the most black cards at the end of the game, wins!

Happy gaming, you filthy animals!

© Provided by TechRadar Cards Against Humanity online

If you're stuck at home away from people, you might quickly run out of things to do - the best board games only last so long, listening to music with people online doesn't keep feeling personal forever, and mobile games to play with family get old when you're sick to death of your loved ones.

Thankfully, everyone's favorite nihilistic game, Cards Against Humanity, can be played online.

Cards Against Humanity is a popular card game (no points for guessing that) which challenges players to come up with funny answers to a question in order to win rounds. You don't need to be witty, or absurd, in order to win - this is a game where being inappropriate is the way to win.

© Provided by TechRadar (Image credit: PlayingCards)Play cards against online

If you're playing on a smartphone, maybe a tablet with a bigger screen will be useful? Check out our list of the best tablets, as well as the best iPads and best Android tablets.

But those packs you're playing Cards Against Humanity with don't need to be physical ones, and it's very possible to play the game online with people on your computer or smartphone, or even play against an AI supercomputer that undoubtedly looks like South Park's Funnybot.

We'll take you through a few options you've got. So set up your video call, get those friends or family ready, and boot up one of these websites.

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Option 1: Playingcards.io

The simplest option

Players: 1-6 | Expansions: None

No expansions

If you just want to jump into a game of Cards Against Humanity online with a few friends, we'd recommend this option as it's the simplest, although there are no expansions and the software is... well, simple.

To use it, head to playingcards.io, head down to 'Cards Against Humanity' and click it. Then click 'Start Game', share that link with your co-carders so they can jump in too and select 'Enter Game'.

Now you've got a digital card board, with black and white cards at the top (with discard piles), space to play white cards in the middle, winning piles for your black cards to the left and right, and a large white box at the bottom. This white box is your private area, as no-one else can see cards here, while they can everywhere else.

The computer isn't going to play the game for you, and in playing cards you have to deal, move cards about, and discard by yourself. This recreates the feel of playing it in real life, but it can be a bit of a nuisance that the game isn't automated for you.

Cards Against Online

It's possible to see where your co-carders' mouses or fingers are too (as this works whether you're playing on computer or smartphone, and the players can be on either), so you can see who's dealing or if someone is trying to peek at cards you've played.

© Provided by TechRadar (Image credit: Pretend You're Xyzzy)

Option 2: Pretend You're Xyzzy

Players: 3-20 | Expansions: All

Against
All the expansions

There are some limitations on the previous entry that this option fixes: namely, you can fit far, far more people in a game, and also you can use any of the numerous expansions should you wish.

Pretend You're Xyzzy is a version of cards against humanity that may not look great, but lends itself to a better experience if you want depth of play. Head to the website, find yourself a unique username, click 'Create Game' in the top left corner, share your URL to your friends so they can join too, and while you wait customize the options you want to play.

When enough people have joined, you can kick off and play that game with as many expansions and extra rules as you like, like a time multiplier or points limit. You can also let people be spectators, and watch without playing.

Pretend You're Xyzzy has a chat log so you don't actually need to be on a video call to play, and you can set a password if you don't want certain friends joining. However, the UI doesn't exactly look as pretty as the alternatives on this list.

Play: head over to this website

© Provided by TechRadar (Image credit: Cards Against Humanity)

Option 3: Cards Against Humanity Lab

Play alone to help the game

Players: One | Expansions: Just future cards

New cards

Cards Against Humanity has its own way to play online, of sorts, but it's not exactly a social experience.

CAH Lab is an AI that plays you a black card, and gives you a selection of white cards. You have to choose the funniest, or proclaim that none are funny, and keep playing. The point of this is not for you to have fun, but for the AI to learn which cards are best, but it's still a pretty enjoyable experience if no-one's around to play.

The CAH AI can come up with some pretty spectacular choices, and it can be familiar to anyone who plays the base game with the 'Rando Cardissian' rule, which involves playing an extra white card each turn on behalf of a ghostly extra.

Lots of the cards that you find in the CAH Lab are ones that aren't actually in the game packs. This can give you an insight into future expansions, and can be refreshing when games with the base pack quickly become routine. Some of them are... less than funny though.

Cards Against Humanity Online App

Play: head over to this website