Never Have I Ever Online
Play Never Have I Ever online with curated statements across categories. Players who have done the thing drink. Great for parties and virtual hangouts.

About This Game
Never Have I Ever is the classic party game adapted for the browser age. The rules are universally known: someone reads a "Never have I ever..." statement, and anyone who *has* done that thing takes a drink. This online version provides an endless supply of statements so nobody has to come up with their own.
The web version typically organizes statements into categories like Mild, Spicy, and R-rated, letting you calibrate for your audience. Playing with family? Stick to the clean deck. College pregame? Crank it up. The statements are crowd-sourced and regularly updated, so even veteran players will encounter fresh material.
What makes this digital version better than just playing from memory is the sheer volume and variety of prompts. Most people run out of good "Never Have I Ever" statements after about 10 rounds. The online version serves up hundreds, ensuring the game stays interesting for as long as you want to play. It also works perfectly over video calls — everyone can see the same statement and react in real time.
How to Play
Gather your group
Get 3 or more players together in person or on a video call. Everyone needs a drink.
Choose a category
Select a statement category based on your group: Clean, Dirty, Party, or Random.
Read the statement
A "Never have I ever..." statement appears on screen. Read it aloud to the group.
Drink or don't
If you HAVE done the thing described, take a drink. If you haven't, sit tight.
Discuss and advance
The fun is in the reactions and stories. When ready, tap for the next statement.
Tips & Strategy
- The best moments come from the stories that follow — don't rush through statements.
- Mix clean and spicy categories to keep the energy varied.
- Works great over Zoom — share the screen so everyone sees the statement simultaneously.
- Set a house rule: if only one person drinks, they have to explain the story.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Everyone already knows the rules — zero learning curve
- Hundreds of curated statements so you never run out
- Scales from 3 to 20+ players effortlessly
- Works perfectly over video calls for remote groups
Cons
- Gameplay is passive — it's really just a prompt generator
- Quality depends heavily on the energy of the group
- Some statement databases include repetitive or low-quality entries
- No scoring or winning condition — it's purely social
Game Details
- Players
- 3-20 players(recommended: 6)
- Duration
- 15-45 minutes
- Difficulty
- Easy
- Price
- Free
- Platforms
- Web
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