Drinking card games are the backbone of house parties, pregames, and late-night hangouts. They add structure to drinking without making it feel like a chore, and the randomness of the cards keeps things unpredictable. Whether you have a physical deck or just your phone, these games will keep your group entertained for hours.
We've gathered the best drinking card games with complete rules for each one. Every game on this list can also be played digitally on PartyPlay — no cards required, no app download, just open it in your browser and go.
1. Kings Cup (Ring of Fire)
Kings Cup is the undisputed champion of drinking card games. You'll find it at virtually every college party and house gathering, and for good reason — the rules are easy to learn, the gameplay escalates naturally, and no two rounds ever play the same way.
How to Play Kings Cup
Spread a deck of cards face-down in a circle around a central cup (the Kings Cup). Players take turns drawing one card at a time. Each card value has a specific rule attached to it. When you draw a card, you follow the rule immediately.
Kings Cup Card Rules
- Ace — Waterfall: Everyone starts drinking. You can only stop when the person before you stops.
- 2 — You: Point at someone. They drink.
- 3 — Me: You drink.
- 4 — Floor: Everyone touches the floor. Last person drinks.
- 5 — Guys: All guys drink.
- 6 — Chicks: All girls drink.
- 7 — Heaven: Everyone points up. Last person drinks.
- 8 — Mate: Pick a drinking buddy. When you drink, they drink too.
- 9 — Rhyme: Say a word. Go around the circle rhyming. First person who can't think of one drinks.
- 10 — Categories: Name a category (car brands, cocktails, etc.). Go around naming items. First to fail drinks.
- Jack — Make a Rule: Create a rule that lasts the entire game. Breaking it means drinking.
- Queen — Question Master: You become the Question Master. Anyone who answers your questions drinks.
- King — Pour into the Kings Cup. The person who draws the 4th King drinks the entire cup.
The brilliance of Kings Cup is how the rules stack. By the midpoint of the game, you might have three active rules from Jacks, two drinking buddies from 8s, and a Question Master trying to trap everyone. It's controlled chaos, and that's exactly what makes it the best drinking card game ever invented.
试试这个游戏
国王杯
2. Ride the Bus
Ride the Bus is a multi-round drinking card game where the loser of each phase accumulates penalty drinks. It starts strategic and ends brutally — which is exactly what makes it so memorable.
How to Play Ride the Bus
- 1 Round 1 — Red or Black: Guess the color of your next card. Wrong? Drink once.
- 2 Round 2 — Higher or Lower: Will the next card be higher or lower than your first? Wrong? Drink twice.
- 3 Round 3 — In Between or Outside: Will your third card fall between your first two, or outside? Wrong? Drink three times.
- 4 Round 4 — Guess the Suit: Guess the suit of your fourth card. Wrong? Drink four times.
- 5 The player with the most drinks at the end "rides the bus" — they face a final gauntlet of cards and drink for every face card revealed.
Ride the Bus builds tension round by round. The stakes double each time, and by round four, the entire table is watching the unlucky player sweat over a one-in-four guess. The bus ride finale is where legends are made — or broken.
3. F*** the Dealer
In this game, the dealer is the one getting punished — and the more wrong guesses players make, the worse it gets for whoever's dealing. It's a brilliant reversal of the typical card game dynamic.
How to Play
The dealer holds the deck. The player to their left guesses the value of the top card. If correct, the dealer drinks. If wrong, the dealer says "higher" or "lower" and the player guesses again. If the second guess is wrong, the player drinks the difference between their guess and the actual card value. After three consecutive wrong guesses by players, the dealer role passes to the next person.
The game gets progressively easier for guessers as more cards are revealed (you can see which values have already been played). This means being the dealer early is fine, but being the dealer late in the game is brutal — hence the name.
4. Pyramid
Pyramid is a bluffing-heavy drinking card game that rewards a good poker face. It's one of the few card drinking games where you can strategically target other players.
How to Play Pyramid
Build a pyramid of face-down cards: 5 on the bottom row, then 4, 3, 2, and 1 on top. Deal 4 cards to each player (they can look at them once, then must remember them). Flip pyramid cards one at a time, starting from the bottom row. If you have a matching card, you can assign drinks — bottom row is 1 drink, second row is 2, and so on up to 5 at the top.
Here's the catch: you can bluff. If someone calls your bluff and you don't actually have the card, you drink double. But if you were telling the truth, the challenger drinks double. This mechanic turns a simple matching game into a psychological battle.
5. Across the Bridge
Across the Bridge is pure tension distilled into card form. It's fast, dramatic, and never fails to get the table screaming.
How to Play
Lay 10 cards face-down in a row — this is the "bridge." The active player flips cards one at a time, moving across the bridge. Number cards are safe — keep going. But flip a face card (Jack, Queen, King, or Ace) and you drink: 1 sip for a Jack, 2 for a Queen, 3 for a King, and 4 for an Ace. Then add new face-down cards equal to the face card's value and start over from that point.
The goal is to cross all 10 cards without hitting a face card. Sounds simple, but the odds are stacked against you. Watching someone flip nine safe cards only to hit a King on the last one is absolutely devastating — for them, and hilarious for everyone else.
6. Waterfall
While Waterfall is technically a rule within Kings Cup, many groups play it as a standalone game. It's the simplest drinking card game on this list, which makes it perfect for large groups or as a warmup before heavier games.
How to Play Waterfall
Sit in a circle. Someone draws a card. If it's an Ace, Waterfall begins: everyone starts drinking simultaneously. The person who drew the card can stop whenever they want. The person to their left can only stop after the first person stops. This continues around the circle — each person can only stop after the person before them stops. The last person in the chain drinks the longest.
Assign other card values however you like — or combine it with Kings Cup rules for a full game. The Waterfall mechanic alone creates hilarious moments, especially when the person who started decides to keep drinking for an uncomfortably long time.
7. Horserace
Horserace is a spectator-friendly drinking card game where players bet on a suit and watch the race unfold. It works brilliantly for larger groups because everyone is invested in the outcome.
How to Play Horserace
Place the four Aces in a row at the starting line. These are the "horses" — one per suit. Players bet drinks on which suit will win. The dealer then flips cards from the remaining deck. Each flipped card moves the matching suit's Ace forward one space. First Ace to cross 7 spaces wins the race.
If your suit wins, you assign the drinks you bet to other players. If your suit loses, you drink them yourself. The side cards add twists: lay 7 cards face-down along the track, and when a horse passes one, flip it — that suit moves backward one space. This creates dramatic comebacks and devastating reversals.
8. Give and Take
Give and Take is a straightforward drinking card game that splits the table into givers and takers — and the stakes escalate as the game progresses.
How to Play Give and Take
Deal 4 cards to each player. Create two rows of 6 face-down cards: one labeled "Give" and one labeled "Take." Flip the Give cards one at a time. If a player has a matching value, they can make someone else drink (1 drink for the first card, 2 for the second, up to 6). Then do the same with the Take row — if you have a match, you drink.
The escalating drink count means the last few cards are high-stakes. Having a match on card 5 or 6 in the Take row is painful. Having a match on card 6 in the Give row is pure power. It's simple enough that even first-timers understand it instantly.
9. Liar's Poker (BS)
Liar's Poker — also called BS, Cheat, or Bluff — adds a drinking penalty to the classic card game of deception. If you enjoy reading people and calling out liars, this is your game.
How to Play
Deal the entire deck evenly. Players take turns placing 1-4 cards face-down, claiming they're a specific value ("two Kings"). The next player can either accept it and play their own cards, or call "BS." If the challenger is right, the liar drinks and takes back their cards plus the pile. If the challenger is wrong, they drink and take the pile. First person to empty their hand wins.
The drinking stakes make bluffing riskier and calling bluffs more rewarding. Players tend to get bolder as the drinks pile up, which makes the late game a psychological minefield of wild claims and paranoid accusations.
10. Up the River, Down the River
This is a two-phase game that starts gentle and ends with a crescendo. It's the perfect transition game — not too complicated, not too simple, and it ends with a bang.
How to Play
Phase 1 — Up the River: Deal each player 4 cards face-up. The dealer then flips cards from the deck. If your card matches, you drink once for the first match, twice for the second, three times for the third, and four for the fourth. Phase 2 — Down the River: Same process, but now you give drinks instead of taking them. Same escalating count: 1, 2, 3, 4. The fun is in the dramatic shift from defensively drinking to aggressively targeting your friends.
Skip the Cards — Play These Online Instead
Don't have a deck of cards? No problem. The best drinking card games work just as well — or better — in digital form. PartyPlay has free browser-based versions of the most popular card drinking games, plus dozens of card-free alternatives that deliver the same energy.
- Kings Cup: Full digital version with automatic card shuffling and rule tracking.
- Never Have I Ever: 500+ statements across multiple intensity levels. No cards needed.
- Truth or Dare: Random assignments with mild, spicy, and extreme modes.
- Pirate Barrel: Pure luck game — the digital version of drawing the wrong card.
All games are free, work on any phone browser, and require zero downloads. Just pass the phone around and play.
试试这个游戏
国王杯
Tips for Better Drinking Card Games
- Start with simpler games (Waterfall, Higher or Lower) before moving to complex ones (Pyramid, Ride the Bus).
- Always agree on drink sizes before starting. A "drink" should be a sip, not a full glass.
- Keep water available. The best drinking games are the ones everyone can enjoy responsibly.
- For large groups (8+), stick to games where everyone plays simultaneously — Kings Cup and Waterfall work best.
- For small groups (3-5), Ride the Bus and Pyramid shine because every player's turn matters more.
- Mix in card-free digital games between rounds to keep the energy high without needing to reshuffle.
试试这个游戏
我从来没有过