Discussion game

Discussion Game Online

Survade is an online discussion game built around persuasion, group judgment, and tense survival choices. Every round gives players something new to argue about before the table votes, so the experience is closer to a structured debate than a quick party prompt.

A game about arguments, not reflexes

Players receive character cards, discuss who is useful, reveal new details, challenge each other, and vote. The fun comes from making a case while the group keeps changing its mind. A strong card can still lose if the player cannot explain its value, and a weak card can survive when the argument is persuasive.

Play online with friends

One player creates a room, shares the code, and everyone joins from a browser. No board, cards, or installation are required. This makes the game practical for remote calls, classrooms, team sessions, or groups that want to start quickly without preparing a custom deck.

What happens during a round

A typical round gives the table new information to discuss. Players may reveal a profession, condition, item, skill, fear, or secret, then explain why that detail should help them survive. The group compares arguments, asks questions, and votes when the round calls for a decision.

Why discussion stays interesting

Survade avoids one-note roles by mixing useful traits with risky details. Someone may have a critical skill and a secret that makes the group hesitate. Another player may look expendable at first, then become important after a scenario twist or a well-timed reveal.

Good for structured social play

The format works when players want conversation with rules around it. There is enough structure to keep the session moving, but the outcome still depends on what people say, who they trust, and how the table reacts under pressure.

How to explain Survade to new players

A simple explanation is enough: everyone gets a character, the group has limited safety, and each round gives players a chance to reveal information and defend themselves. When the vote comes, players should choose based on the arguments they heard, not only on the first card that looked useful.

What makes a good discussion

The best sessions happen when players ask specific questions. Why should the group keep your skill? What risk does your secret create? Who benefits if this vote goes through? Those questions turn the game from a list of cards into an actual social debate.