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The Madness Behind the Game for Horrible People

Learn how a group of Chicagoans created our favorite TNT game, Cards Against Humanity, and the easiest way to know the darkness of a man's soul.

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One way to potentially break the ice is to force someone to read the phrase “Virginia Tech Massacre.”

Cards Against Humanity, self-described as “a party game for horrible people,” is an awful version of Apples to Apples. By awful, of couse, I mean amazing, clever, and delightfully insane.

The rules are deceptively simple. Each round, there’s a judge who picks a black card. Everyone responds with white cards. Black cards contain various setups (“Instead of coal, Santa now gives the bad children [blank]”), while white cards are used to fill in the [blank] (“the blood of Christ,” “a bleached asshole,” “poorly-timed Holocaust jokes.”).

The goal isn’t to be accurate, mostly because that’s basically impossible. You want laughter.

At least in my experience, whenever Apples to Apples gets pulled out, it’s a painful wait until someone pulls a blank card and begins scribbling down nightmares. The most vile phrases become part of an otherwise completely innocent game. Cards Against Humanity proposes a version of that game where all of the cards are like that.

Max Temkin is just one of the creators of Cards Against Humanity.
Max Temkin is just one of the creators of Cards Against Humanity.

Max Temkin is one of the people you have to thank (blame?) for Cards Against Humanity. Maybe you know him from his other Kickstarters, too: software to drive one of his other pet projects, Human vs. Zombies, and a set of slick-looking philosophy posters.

The Chicago native (and avid deep dish pizza defender) told me the similarities to Apples to Apples were purely coincidental.

“I don’t think the point of Apples to Apples is a comedy game,” he said. “If there’s any conceptual part of Cards Against Humanity that you can say is a good idea, which is already a stretch, it’s that we had the idea that you should have a party game where the point is to be funny in that open model like Apples to Apples.”

Cards Against Humanity is not just Temkin’s baby, though he’s become its public face. The game comes from his core group of friends, people he’s known for years, and started as a New Years Eve distraction. The way Temkin tells it, his group weren’t exactly the kids getting invited to the cool parties you’d heard about in the hallways around high school, so they found other ways to pass time.

“We love structured activities where there are rules and you have cues on how to behave,” he said.

Balderdash, a board game focused on bluffing your way through word definitions, was an early inspiration for Cards Against Humanity. Like Cards Against Humanity, Balderdash has more to do with understanding the psychology of the judge each round, rather than being correct. Being accurate only makes sense when the judge might respect that. Another player might want to be entertained, and you’re forced to change your response appropriately.

An early version of the game didn’t have the white cards. There was a discussion card (i.e. “If you could only eat one food for the rest of your life, what would it be?”), and that’s it. The core of the game was based was pure improvisation, putting the onus of humor and creativity squarely on the player. That worked for Temkin’s tight-knit group of friends, but the moment outsiders came in, the game immediately lost some of its magic.

“They had a really hard time being funny with it,” he said. “They could play honest answers, but they weren’t as good as writing comedy answers that made fun of the other people. We realized that if we’re going to make this game so we can play with other people, we have to put the jokes in for people. “

This when Cards Against Humanity began morphing into a dirty variant of Apples to Apples.

As college friends started asking about how to purchase the game, Temkin’s group put the cards online in PDF form. The decks that existed were hand-crafted. That PDF is still available, but Cards Against Humanity raised $15,570 on Kickstarter (they wanted $4,000), which allowed the game to earn a formal production process. Good luck getting a copy, though--it’s still sold out, and every time the game has become available again, it disappears in hours.

It’s worth the wait, though.

Temkin and his friends during a brain storming session. Look how crazy they are!
Temkin and his friends during a brain storming session. Look how crazy they are!

Your first time with Cards Against Humanity, it’s not even about cracking jokes. Every time you flip a card, someone is laughing or groaning. “Win cards” emerge, in which a card is so profoundly offensive or strange, context is irrelevant. The second time, the shock value wears off. “Virginia Tech Massacre” still gets you a little bit, but soon, the card alone isn't enough. That’s when the next layer unfolds, and wordplay skills comes into play.

A real consistency to the jokes embedded on the cards becomes apparent once you’ve seen the full deck, too. Some of Temkin’s friends are still in Chicago, while others have jobs or graduate school elsewhere. Every week, though, they hop onto a Google+ hangout and hash out new cards.

There are no hard and fast rules for the process, and there isn’t a directive to be offensive.

“Offensive cards are fine, there’s no line that we won’t cross,” he said. “It just has to be funny. If you’re making people uncomfortable, it has to be in service of a great joke. If it’s making them uncomfortable and it’s not funny, if it’s just shocking, it’s not worth it for the game.”

The biggest surprise about the card creation process: all of it happens while they’re stone cold sober. I can’t say the same has been true of the times when we’ve played Cards Against Humanity on camera.

Giant Bomb's dirty secret? Brad Shoemaker is the best player at Cards Against Humanity.
Giant Bomb's dirty secret? Brad Shoemaker is the best player at Cards Against Humanity.

As often as life allows, the next step is to have the group get together to finalize new cards face-to-face. This is where the personality dynamics of each member comes into play. Temkin described the process as a hostage negotiation, as one friend tries to convince the whole group why their card shouldn’t be axed.

There is a logic to it all, too.

Are there too many poop jokes? How about sex jokes? Are more cards related to men needed? The details of balancing are tracked via spreadsheet, even if their importance isn't apparent to people busy laughing at “Expecting a burp and vomiting on the floor.”

Sometimes, though, it doesn’t need a reason to be included, and it doesn’t even have to be clever.

“On our last writing retreat, someone said ‘flying sex snakes,’ which isn’t a thing,” he said. “It’s just some words that someone said, but we laughed for like 15 minutes! We couldn’t identify why were laughing, but it just had to go in the game because it made us laugh so much. It’s not responsible to put that card in the game.”

Temkin wasn’t very specific about the future of Cards Against Humanity (don't expect an iPhone version anytime soon), but the reason was obvious: those steps are taken very slowly. It’s dawning on Temkin that Cards Against Humanity is now a legitimate business. This means he’s renting temporary office space near his apartment in Chicago, and consulting with his friends about where to take the game next.

There will be more cards, of course.

For now, he’s processing the idea being a game designer, and if he even wants the title. Given how many would love the next game from the designers of Cards Against Humanity, his group may not have a choice.

Patrick Klepek on Google+

130 Comments

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kinnonyee

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Edited By kinnonyee

The Judge's Card: "Why do I hurt all over?"

The winning card: "Black People"

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CatsAkimbo

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Edited By CatsAkimbo

I'm waiting to buy the game because it looks like great fun... but I know for sure I'll take at least one card out and throw it away because it does cross that line from "offensive and funny" to just "offensive." I guess that line is in different places for different groups.

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Stealthmaster86

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Edited By Stealthmaster86

After watching the TNT, I have come to the conclusion that I MUST PLAY THIS GAME!

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TheHumanDove

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Edited By TheHumanDove

Overrated, just like Apples to apples. That shit gets old real quick

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Zleunamme

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Edited By Zleunamme

Are the makers of Cards Against Humanity fans of Helvetica? The minimalist design of the cards is striking.

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leboe

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Edited By leboe

The canadian version of this game is no extra cost, HUGE ups to these guys!

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Mundi

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Edited By Mundi

I just hope that when they re-stock, they can ship internationally.

Or I might need to move west.

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jking47

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Edited By jking47

"A real consistency to the jokes embedded on the cards becomes apparent once you’ve seen the full deck. too. Some of Temkin’s friends are still in Chicago, while others have jobs or graduate school elsewhere."

Can you spot the typo in this sentence? Hey man if you need someone to fucking run spellcheck for you before you post an article let me know. I am sure its not like you get paid for this stuff anyways.

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deactivated-59a31562f0e29

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@jking47: I'll get the torches, you're on pitchfork duty.

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Makoma

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Edited By Makoma

Oh fuck yes! Bandits of the Acoustic Revolution!

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Duke_of_IRL

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@CatsAkimbo said:

I'm waiting to buy the game because it looks like great fun... but I know for sure I'll take at least one card out and throw it away because it does cross that line from "offensive and funny" to just "offensive." I guess that line is in different places for different groups.

At least for my friends and I there are no lines which shouldn't be crossed. Call it being jaded by longtime exposure to the internet, call us assholes, but the more offensive something is the funnier it is, and we don't distinguish between "offensive and funny" and "offensive" -- the more offensive something is without a blatant attempt at humor the better. Needless to say, this game is perfect for us. Up until now we've used Apples to Apples but this game blows it out of the water, and I have the TNT to thank for exposing me to this great gem of a game.

@jking47 said:

"A real consistency to the jokes embedded on the cards becomes apparent once you’ve seen the full deck. too. Some of Temkin’s friends are still in Chicago, while others have jobs or graduate school elsewhere."

Can you spot the typo in this sentence? Hey man if you need someone to fucking run spellcheck for you before you post an article let me know. I am sure its not like you get paid for this stuff anyways.

Eh, cut him some slack. We all make silly errors despite being careful. I've seen plenty of other professional writers with misspellings, incorrect grammar, etc. Calling out Patrick for a typo wherein he accidentally pressed the key adjacent to the intended one seems a bit extreme.

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porr

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Edited By porr

All these people talking about how hard it is to get a set. Just take a flash drive with the PDF from their website and do it yourself at staples or some print shop. I had a set printed on card stock and it was like 11$! That's the way to do it.

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project343

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Edited By project343

Bought it minutes after the TNT. Best party experience I've ever had.

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HaltIamReptar

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Edited By HaltIamReptar

If this game was being published by a major game company, the guys who made Apples and Apples would be suing the fuck out of them. Don't give me the nonsense of "coincidence" when it's exactly the same game except with bad words.

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Wezmon

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@Humanity said:

I guess I have a thicker skin because both Cards Against Humanity TNT's were fairly boring to me and I couldn't get into it. I believe the humor is found when you turn an innocent game like Apples to Apples into something with a double entendre, where the sudden realization that while perfectly innocent, at the same time something is horribly vile - thats where the real humor is. Cards Against Humanity just seem too blatant because you know whatever someone puts down will be offensive, just varying degrees of how much. Possibly this would be fun if I played it with people I knew, but I just can't imagine sitting down to play a game with the singular purpose of trying to out-gross my friends with "naughty" phrases.

#1, When Patrick talks about the game taking on another level when you play it for the 2nd or 3rd time, that's exactly what he is referring to (double entendres). I was playing on the weekend and the black card was "What do I think about during sex?", and the winning white card was "Parting the Red Sea". We larfed.

#2, Great ironic username, bro. I guess the cards are against you. Heh.

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SonicFire

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Edited By SonicFire

I definitely love this game, but I wish the VT Massacre card wasn't in there. It's not exactly funny for someone who attended the school at the time and lost friends (like myself). I suppose there are similar arguments for a lot of the cards, but the article itself recognizes that one card is particularly rough; the first time the guys played they initially didn't want to include that one.

I suppose the question really is whether everything is acceptable if the goal is to be offensive, right? What if there were racial slurs on the cards? Is that still in good fun? I mean, I personally don't get offended by much, and of course, when I play the game, I just don't use that card.

I really do support this game, and recommend it to all my friends (who have a good sense of humor) but to me it does kind of bring up a broader discussion of whether or not there are some things we objectively shouldn't laugh about, even in a wacky context.

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MrKlorox

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Edited By MrKlorox

So you think it's a game for horrible people, and you admit you like it. What does that say about you?

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CaptainInvictus

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@George_Hukas said:

God this place is so fucking hypocritical..

Get out. Stop using this website.

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demazin

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Edited By demazin

If only I could buy a damn copy!!

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Humanity

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Edited By Humanity

@Wezmon: Well I was talking about a double entendre of two conflicting ideas.

MY username IS pretty sweet.

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MrJorOwe

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Edited By MrJorOwe

Make them make a UK version, so we don't have to pay £70 to some asshole on ebay who just bought 30 sets knowing we would want them. Please, this is all I want. I'll even pay £70 for it, just not to them.

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JAH_Donuts

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@paulwade1984: It's ok. humor tends to be subjective and can be isolating at times. You don't find it funny, thats neither good or bad. Just your personal taste.

Now if you said Sasha baron Cohen isn't funny I'd kick you in the fucking ankle and spit in your nose.

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CatsAkimbo

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Edited By CatsAkimbo

@Duke_of_IRL said:

@CatsAkimbo said:

I'm waiting to buy the game because it looks like great fun... but I know for sure I'll take at least one card out and throw it away because it does cross that line from "offensive and funny" to just "offensive." I guess that line is in different places for different groups.

At least for my friends and I there are no lines which shouldn't be crossed. Call it being jaded by longtime exposure to the internet, call us assholes, but the more offensive something is the funnier it is, and we don't distinguish between "offensive and funny" and "offensive" -- the more offensive something is without a blatant attempt at humor the better. Needless to say, this game is perfect for us. Up until now we've used Apples to Apples but this game blows it out of the water, and I have the TNT to thank for exposing me to this great gem of a game.

Nah, I don't think you're an asshole. I'm jealous of you in fact. It's just when one of the cards refers to something traumatic that you or someone you know experienced, it's pretty much impossible to find funny.

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GirnBlanston

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Edited By GirnBlanston

I must have this.

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kevinpyon

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@Humanity said:

I guess I have a thicker skin because both Cards Against Humanity TNT's were fairly boring to me and I couldn't get into it. I believe the humor is found when you turn an innocent game like Apples to Apples into something with a double entendre, where the sudden realization that while perfectly innocent, at the same time something is horribly vile - thats where the real humor is. Cards Against Humanity just seem too blatant because you know whatever someone puts down will be offensive, just varying degrees of how much. Possibly this would be fun if I played it with people I knew, but I just can't imagine sitting down to play a game with the singular purpose of trying to out-gross my friends with "naughty" phrases.

I tend to feel the same way towards this game. It reminds me of Family Guy-type shock humor. And maybe I'm overly sensitive, but I do find some of the cards just distasteful (the Virginia Tech Massacre card as one example).

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SuperSonic1305

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Edited By SuperSonic1305

Monthly Cards Against Humanity TNT or bust.

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kevinpyon

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@chilibean_3 said:

@patrickklepek said:

@chilibean_3 said:

I really like this game. Bought it and introduced to my friends and they all love it. But I don't think I'd ever call the game clever. And I don't believe for a second this nonsense about not taking inspiration from Apple To Apples. I mean, it IS Apple To Apples but requires much less from the players to add a twisted humor to it.

They realize it's like Apples to Apples, but as the story points out, if you follow the design process of the game's ruleset, it simply ended up becoming like Apples to Apples.

Maybe I'm just being way too cynical about this. I read how the process was described but my mind just says, "nope". Played Apple To Apples and said, "yeah, like this but tweaked."

I get what you're saying the game just seems like a mere "dirty" version of Apples to Apples. Still, I don't think anyone is trying to assert that this is some high-brow game that appeals to some intellectually stimulating sense of humor.

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kevinpyon

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Edited By kevinpyon

@CatsAkimbo said:

@Duke_of_IRL said:

@CatsAkimbo said:

I'm waiting to buy the game because it looks like great fun... but I know for sure I'll take at least one card out and throw it away because it does cross that line from "offensive and funny" to just "offensive." I guess that line is in different places for different groups.

At least for my friends and I there are no lines which shouldn't be crossed. Call it being jaded by longtime exposure to the internet, call us assholes, but the more offensive something is the funnier it is, and we don't distinguish between "offensive and funny" and "offensive" -- the more offensive something is without a blatant attempt at humor the better. Needless to say, this game is perfect for us. Up until now we've used Apples to Apples but this game blows it out of the water, and I have the TNT to thank for exposing me to this great gem of a game.

Nah, I don't think you're an asshole. I'm jealous of you in fact. It's just when one of the cards refers to something traumatic that you or someone you know experienced, it's pretty much impossible to find funny.

I don't think you should feel jealous of someone who values being completely jaded. I prefer to be like you and have some sense of conscience! :)

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Edited By 5

not a video game, not clever, not newsworthy

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Kaowas

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Edited By Kaowas

Thankfully living in Canada has its perks when it comes to purchasing Cards Against Humanity. I got my copy 2 days after ordering it. CAH is such an amazing game, I hope everybody gets a chance to taste the horribleness for themselves.

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Duke_of_IRL

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@kevtheasian said:

@CatsAkimbo said:

@Duke_of_IRL said:

@CatsAkimbo said:

I'm waiting to buy the game because it looks like great fun... but I know for sure I'll take at least one card out and throw it away because it does cross that line from "offensive and funny" to just "offensive." I guess that line is in different places for different groups.

At least for my friends and I there are no lines which shouldn't be crossed. Call it being jaded by longtime exposure to the internet, call us assholes, but the more offensive something is the funnier it is, and we don't distinguish between "offensive and funny" and "offensive" -- the more offensive something is without a blatant attempt at humor the better. Needless to say, this game is perfect for us. Up until now we've used Apples to Apples but this game blows it out of the water, and I have the TNT to thank for exposing me to this great gem of a game.

Nah, I don't think you're an asshole. I'm jealous of you in fact. It's just when one of the cards refers to something traumatic that you or someone you know experienced, it's pretty much impossible to find funny.

I don't think you should feel jealous of someone who values being completely jaded. I prefer to be like you and have some sense of conscience! :)

I didn't say I valued being jaded, it's just how it is for better or worse. I can definitely understand not finding things that remind one of past traumatic events funny, though for some reason that sort of stuff just doesn't affect me personally. I've definitely had some trauma in my lifetime, including being robbed at gunpoint (twice!) but I guess I'm just emotionally bankrupt in some ways, as are the friends I play with. I'd probably prefer to not be this way but it is what it is. This game definitely fills a weird specific niche for me, IE a bunch of assholes sitting around wanting to play a party game, so I'm glad I found it. I have nothing against taking out really racy cards, I was just offering up my own viewpoint.

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YummyTreeSap

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Edited By YummyTreeSap

Yeah, I'm not sold on this one. I like the design of the cards, but the idea seems pretty boring. I'd be all for it if it really did expose the darkness within people, but when every card is offensive, does it really accomplish that? I would agree that a lot of the fun in Apples to Apples is indeed squeezing a horrible double-entendre out of a seemingly innocuous answer. Every card being dirty and vile (and blatantly so) seems kind of dull. I dunno.

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kkotd

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Edited By kkotd

I will sub for life if you play this game weekly and put out a video. -throws money at Giant Bomb-

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Phished0ne

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Edited By Phished0ne

Wait...Apples to Apples isnt inherently a comedy game? I call bullshit on that, My friends and I almost never scored for "accurate" answers in A2A(oh god A2A...some abbreviations should never be used), we always gave out points for funny answers.

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Phished0ne

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@SonicFire said:

Is that still in good fun? I mean, I personally don't get offended by much, and of course, when I play the game, I just don't use that card.

I really do support this game, and recommend it to all my friends (who have a good sense of humor) but to me it does kind of bring up a broader discussion of whether or not there are some things we objectively shouldn't laugh about, even in a wacky context.

Racial slurs can be funny, my friend who has a bit of a looser tongue than me will call me racial slurs. I am a white, beardy hippy, so of course the absurdity of him calling me a name is humorous, although it can wear thin if used too often. It all just needs to be given a proper context. The black cards work as context for the jokes in CAH, so if your black card is absurd enough, of course any card could be funny.

Given enough time anything can become funny. Although probably not to the people that experienced something as horrible as what happened at VT. But i can see a world where a fringe comedy troupe does a humorous(or not depending on your situation or the qualty of the skit) skit about a school shooter being a rabid barney fan or some other strange premise(Excuse my poor premise, i am not a comedy writer). I'm not saying it isnt in poor taste if timed improperly. Sure people could be offended, they have the right to, but that doesn't mean they should ruin it for others, and it doesn't mean daring comedians should be scared away from it. It's their job to press boundaries.

Funny people can make anything funny, look at Louis CK, he's made a career out of jokes about rape, and other things people would argue you 'shouldnt joke about'. The problem is when the jokes fall flat. If your premise isnt crazy enough, people will just take it as you trying it for the shock value, and thats where the offensiveness comes, in my opinion. It boils down to knowing your audience and knowing what you think they will or wont be offended by, even if the joke falls flat. There is also an art to making a joke not 'about the subject' but about the situation around the subject. Just things to consider.

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Smersh

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Edited By Smersh

Cards Against Humanity is an amazingly funny game!

I played it with friends recently and we were literally in tears.

Will be interesting to see how new game+ develops.

Regarding preparation, cutting out the cards took some time...

but trying not to read them while doing so was the hardest part!

6/5 stars.

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jaks

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Edited By jaks

great more lame hipster ironic games for me not to spend my money on

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Alita_99

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Edited By Alita_99

I have never heard of this game before, but now that I know of its existence, I must have it.

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foggel

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Edited By foggel

Is there a video for this TNT?

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Nekroskop

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Edited By Nekroskop

They should make this game for XBL in the style of UNO. I would pay for that.

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Amukasa

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Edited By Amukasa

This game isn't funny. It's like the opposite of mad libs but still not funny.

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dropabombonit

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Edited By dropabombonit

My mate printed out the PDF version of this game and we had such a good time with 5 of us just playing the worst/best cards

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jNerd

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Edited By jNerd

I can't wait to purchase a legit set of CaH.

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hermes

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Edited By hermes

You need to make a CAH's edition bombcast... It could be great.

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dewar

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Edited By dewar

@Amukasa said:

This game isn't funny. It's like the opposite of mad libs but still not funny.

You are in the minority.

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triviaman09

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Edited By triviaman09

I printed out the PDF and played it multiple times with my friends. Good times were had by all. I recommend everyone give it a shot unless you have easily offended friends.

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napalm

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Edited By napalm

@Amukasa said:

This game isn't funny. It's like the opposite of mad libs but still not funny.

Cool story, bro.

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einar29

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Edited By einar29

@ccampb89: Like the lantern run?

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kennybaese

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Edited By kennybaese

A week or two and friend and I spent an hour in a Kinkos making a free set of CAH cards after which we promptly went to a party at which we knew basically no one. We then sat down with some beers and played through the entire deck.

I can't wait for that irresponsible number of printings to hit Amazon so I can go and buy it already.

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EtanLawok

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Edited By EtanLawok

Downright amazing game, though I do worry about its ability to stay relavent without new cards or a lot of alcohol on repeat playthroughs.