The classic Would You Rather game, online and free
Would You Rather is the timeless game of impossible choices — two options, no right answer, and a lot of laughs (and arguments) along the way. This free online version gives you hundreds of questions across categories like funny, hard, gross, superpowers, and food. Make your pick and instantly see how it compares, then hit Next for another dilemma. It's perfect for parties, road trips, awkward silences, ice-breakers, or killing time with friends.
How to play
- Read both options and pick the one you'd genuinely choose.
- See the split — each side fills up to show roughly how people lean, and your choice is highlighted.
- Keep going — tap Next for an endless stream, or switch categories for a different vibe.
Great for groups
Pass a phone around, project it on a screen, or play in a call. Would You Rather is a fantastic ice-breaker for classrooms, team-building, sleepovers, and first dates — every answer is a tiny window into how someone thinks. If you want something with more edge, try our Truth or Dare game — 300+ questions with Family, Friends, and Spicy modes.
Would You Rather questions to get you started
A taste of what's inside — the game has over a hundred more across funny, hard, gross, superpower, and food categories.
- Would you rather fight one horse-sized duck, or 100 duck-sized horses?
- Would you rather only be able to whisper, or only be able to shout?
- Would you rather have a pet dragon, or a pet unicorn?
- Would you rather have a personal chef, or a personal chauffeur?
- Would you rather have fingers as long as your legs, or legs as long as your fingers?
- Would you rather have a dance party every time you heard music, or fall asleep every time there was silence?
- Would you rather have skin that changes color with your mood, or hair that grows an inch every hour?
- Would you rather have a tail you can't control, or ears that wiggle when you're nervous?
No printable list needed — the online game serves them endlessly, shows you how others would answer, and never repeats until you've seen them all.