Most Likely To
Most Likely To is a party drinking game where players vote on who in the group is most likely to do something. The person with the most votes drinks.

About This Game
Most Likely To is a hilarious voting-based drinking game that puts friendships to the test. A prompt like "Most likely to survive a zombie apocalypse" or "Most likely to cry during a movie" appears on screen, and everyone simultaneously points at (or votes for) the person they think fits best. Whoever gets the most votes takes a drink.
The genius of the game is that it reveals how your friends actually perceive you. Sometimes the results are flattering ("Most likely to become famous"), sometimes they're roasting ("Most likely to get lost in their own neighborhood"), and sometimes they spark genuine debate. The discussions after each vote are often funnier than the vote itself.
The online version provides hundreds of curated prompts across different categories — from wholesome and funny to savage and NSFW. This solves the common problem of running out of good "most likely to" scenarios after a few rounds. Categories let you tune the intensity based on whether you're playing with close friends, coworkers, or family.
How to Play
Set up the group
Get 3+ players together. Everyone needs to be able to see the prompt screen.
Read the prompt
A "Most Likely To..." scenario appears on screen. Read it aloud to the group.
Vote simultaneously
On the count of three, everyone points at (or says the name of) the person they think is most likely.
Tally and drink
The person with the most votes takes a drink. Ties mean both people drink. If it's unanimous, take two drinks.
Tips & Strategy
- Count down "3, 2, 1, point!" to ensure simultaneous voting — delayed votes get influenced.
- The best moments come from split votes and the arguments that follow.
- Play with people who know each other well — the game falls flat with strangers.
- For remote play, have everyone type their vote in chat and reveal at the same time.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Incredibly simple rules that anyone can learn in 30 seconds
- Generates genuinely funny moments and group conversations
- Scales well from small to medium-sized groups
- Free online versions provide hundreds of quality prompts
Cons
- Can feel mean-spirited if prompts are too harsh or one person keeps getting voted for
- Not fun with strangers or people who don't know each other well
- Gameplay is very simple — no strategy or skill involved
- Risk of someone feeling singled out or hurt
Game Details
- Players
- 3-15 players(recommended: 6)
- Duration
- 15-30 minutes
- Difficulty
- Easy
- Price
- Free
- Platforms
- Web
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