Our family loves game night, and we keep a carefully curated collection of our top 30 favorites. The selection spans card games, party games, puzzle games and more. We prioritize games that are as enjoyable for adults as they are for kids—aside from a couple of clearly labeled adult-only titles, everything shown here works well for the whole family.

I’ve organized our games into the categories below, though many titles fit into multiple groups:
- All-Time Favorite Family Board Games
- Best Group or Party Games
- Best 4-Person Games
- Best 2-Person Games
- Best Fast-Paced Games
- Best Chill Games
- Best Easy-to-Learn Games
- Best Small or Travel Games
I give a short description for each game. When a game appears in multiple lists, you may need to scroll to another section to find its summary.
What We Look For In A Family Board Game
We favor games that work equally well for kids and adults. Now that our children are 9 and 13, we’ve moved beyond many younger kid-specific games. We enjoy a mix of fast-paced party titles and longer, strategy-based games, which is why our compact collection still offers wide variety. All 30 games fit neatly in the cabinet shown below, proving you don’t need a whole closet to have a versatile game collection.

All-Time Favorite Family Board Games
These are the games we reach for most often. They’ve stood the test of time in our household and consistently get played:
- Exploding Kittens
- Sequence
- Ticket To Ride
- What Do You Meme? (Family Edition)
- Low Down

Exploding Kittens
Exploding Kittens is a quick, humorous card game that works with two or more players. Players use illustrated action cards to sabotage others and try to avoid drawing an exploding kitten card. The simple rules and silly card powers make it easy to learn and fun for all ages. Expansion packs add new mechanics and twists if you want to extend gameplay.
Ticket To Ride
Ticket To Ride is one of the deeper, more strategic games on our shelf. Players collect train cards to claim routes across a map, aiming to complete the most valuable connections between cities. It takes longer to play than many party games, but it’s consistently rewarding and approachable for older kids and adults. Multiple versions and maps let you vary the experience.

Low Down
Low Down is a clever card game where each player gets a 3×3 grid of face-down numbered cards. The goal is to end a round with the lowest total, but you and other players don’t initially know which cards are high or low. The game mixes memory, bluffing and light sabotage, making it a repeat favorite for our kids.
Best Group or Party Games
These titles shine when you have friends or extra family members over. They’re lively, social and easy to scale up to larger groups.
- Cards Against Humanity (Family Edition)
- What Do You Meme? (Family Edition)
- Incohearent Family
- Taco Cat Goat Cheese Pizza
- Codenames

Incohearent Family
Incohearent Family challenges players to decode hilariously mangled phrases that sound like familiar expressions when spoken aloud. It supports large groups and tends to create long stretches of laughter—perfect for parties and family gatherings.
Cards Against Humanity (Family Edition)
The family edition of Cards Against Humanity follows the classic fill-in-the-blank mechanic but with kid-friendly content. Players submit white cards to complete a black prompt judged anonymously by a rotating judge. It keeps the social, comedic element of the original game while being appropriate for family play, and expansion packs let you tailor the deck.

What Do You Meme? (Family Edition)
What Do You Meme? replaces the judge’s prompt cards with photos of popular meme images. Players submit caption cards and the judge picks the funniest match. The family edition keeps the humor accessible while offering the same laughter-filled dynamic as its adult counterpart.
Tip: For games that benefit from more cards, we sometimes add an extra card from the draw pile as a phantom “Computer” player. That random card can produce surprisingly perfect (and often hilarious) results, and it’s a fun trick when you only have a small group.
Best 4-Person Games
These are especially great when the full family of four is available—many are well-suited to two teams of two.
- Blokus
- Sequence
- What Do You Meme? (Family Edition)
- Cards Against Humanity (Family Edition)
- Codenames
- Hues and Cues

Blokus
Blokus is like competitive Tetris: players place polyomino pieces on the board so they touch at corners but not edges. The board fills quickly and the game becomes a tactical contest to maximize your pieces while limiting opponents’ options.
Sequence
Sequence combines elements of Bingo and Connect Four: the goal is to make five-in-a-row on a shared board. It’s especially fun when played as two teams of two and is intuitive for players of all ages.

Codenames
Codenames is a team-based word-guessing game where spymasters give one-word clues to help their teammates identify the correct words on a grid while avoiding words that belong to the other team. It rewards clever associations and teamwork.
Hues and Cues
Hues and Cues is a color-guessing game played on a vivid gradient board. Players give single or double-word clues to have teammates guess a secret color. Scoring depends on how closely the guess matches the target, and the game highlights how subjective color language can be.
Best 2- or 3-Person Games
When it’s just a few players, these games are ideal. They play well with small groups but scale up easily.
- Exploding Kittens
- Uno Flip
- Rack-o
- Shut The Box
- Ticket To Ride

Uno Flip
Uno Flip updates the classic Uno formula with double-sided cards: a light side and a darker, higher-stakes side. The flip mechanic changes the tempo and can dramatically alter a round, making it a lively replacement for the traditional deck.
Rack-o
Rack-o is a simple yet satisfying numeric ordering game. Players try to arrange ten cards in ascending order in a rack, swapping cards drawn from the deck. It’s a nice balance of luck and strategy and works well for younger players because the rack keeps cards visible.
Best Fast-Paced Games
For high-energy play or quick rounds, these titles keep everyone moving and engaged. They’re great when you want something lively and immediate.
- Taco Cat Goat Cheese Pizza
- Tenzi
- Buildzi
- Anarchy Pancakes
- Bananagrams
- Catchphrase

Taco Cat Goat Cheese Pizza
This card-slap game cycles players through the words “Taco, Cat, Goat, Cheese, Pizza.” When the spoken word matches the top card, everyone slaps the pile; the last player to slap takes it. The fast pace and physical element make it hilarious and energetic for groups.
Tenzi
Tenzi is a frantic dice race where each player tries to roll ten dice to show the same number. With countless variations and house rules, Tenzi is endlessly replayable and great for short bursts of competition.
Buildzi
From the makers of Tenzi, Buildzi uses colorful Tetris-like blocks and challenges players to recreate a formation shown on a card. It’s fast, tactile and has difficulty options for extra challenge.

Best Chill Games
For relaxed evenings or games that allow breaks for snacks, drinks or letting the dog out, these titles are lower-energy but still engaging.
- Ticket To Ride
- Sequence
- Hues and Cues
- Mantis
- Bears Vs. Babies
- Low Down

Bears Vs. Babies
Bears Vs. Babies is a whimsical creature-building game where you assemble creatures to battle waves of attacking babies. It’s odd, creative and a lot of fun when you want something imaginative but not too intense.
Mantis
Mantis is a colorful cutthroat card game about collecting mantis shrimp of matching colors and stealing from opponents. The vivid art and simple mechanics make it visually appealing and enjoyable for casual play.

Best Easy-To-Learn Games
If you prefer titles with straightforward rules and quick setup, these are ideal to break out for new players or short sessions.
- Hi-Lo Flip
- Bananagrams
- Shut The Box
- Blokus
- Sequence
- Rack-o

Bananagrams
Bananagrams is a fast, tile-based word game similar to a speeded-up Scrabble. Players race to build individual crossword grids and draw tiles as others use theirs. It’s quick, educational and great for expanding vocabulary in a playful way.
Hi-Lo Flip
Hi-Lo Flip is a simple card game where players play cards higher or lower than the previous card based on a flipped hi/lo coin. If you can’t play, the coin flips again and you may draw a card. The mechanics are easy to teach and the turns move briskly.

Shut The Box
Shut The Box is a dice-driven game where players use rolls to flip down numbers with the goal of closing out all values from 1 to 10. It feels a bit like a streamlined Yahtzee and has a satisfying tactile board.
Best Small or Travel Games
Compact games are perfect for small homes, travel, cafes or packing for a trip. These titles are lightweight but plenty of fun.
- Splurt!
- Barkboozle
- Anarchy Pancakes
- Uno Flip
- Taco Cat Goat Cheese Pizza
- Exploding Kittens

Barkboozle
Barkboozle is a personalized take on the classic matching game Spot It—players race to spot the matching symbol between two cards. We picked a version featuring our dog, which makes the game sentimental and fun. It’s quick, portable, and simple to learn.
Anarchy Pancakes
Anarchy Pancakes plays like a frantic, multiplayer Spot It variant. All players flip cards simultaneously and try to match symbols with other players, creating a hectic and fun scramble—hence the anarchy.
Splurt!
Splurt! uses category and letter prompts on cards—be the first to shout (or “splurt”) a correct answer to win the card. It’s fast, portable, and produces endless combinations for quick rounds anywhere.

Our Favorite Classic Family Board Games
While we lean toward newer, quirky games, we still enjoy a few classic titles. We recently added Clue back into rotation after the kids enjoyed it with their grandparents, and we still break out a Scrabble set that’s been in our family for years. We’ve pared down bulky sets like Monopoly and Sorry because they rarely get played, but a few classics remain.

That’s our current roundup of favorite family games—many don’t even require a board. We’re always looking for new additions (our son is the biggest game enthusiast), so our lineup evolves. Check our social channels for whatever becomes our next obsession.

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