Play bullshit online card game




















Shuffle and deal a deck of 52 cards. These should be evenly distributed amongst the players. To keep the game from getting too complicated or lengthy, you should probably keep it from 3 to 6 players, though you can play the game with 2 to 10 players. Some of the players may end up with one more or fewer cards than the rest of the players, but that won't affect the outcome of the game in the long run.

Before you begin, remember that the object is to get rid of all of your cards first. Determine who should go first. It can be the dealer, the person with the ace of spades, the two of clubs, or whoever has the most cards if the distribution wasn't quite even.

This person lays a card or several down on the table and tells the other players the type of card they just used. The person who goes first should always start by laying down an ace or a two. Continue putting down the cards clockwise in consecutive ascending order. For example, if the first player put down one or more aces, the next player should put down one or more twos, the third should put down three or more twos, and so on.

When it's your turn and you put down your cards, you have to say, "One ace," "two twos," or "three kings," and so on. You may not actually have the cards that you need to put down -- the fun is in faking it. If you say you've put down 3 of a card you don't have, it's likely that a player will have at least 2 of the card and will know you're lying and will call "bullshit! Let's say it's your turn to put down queens, and you happen to have two of them.

Say, "What am I again? Your goal is to make people believe you when you're lying, and make them doubt you when you're telling the truth. Call "bullshit" on anyone who you think is lying. If you know someone is lying because you have the cards they claim to have in your hand, because they're getting low on cards, or just because you have a feeling they're not telling the truth, then call "bullshit!

This entails an accusation and reveal, in which the person who just played is required to turn over the cards they just put and show everyone else what they actually are. If the cards aren't what the player said they were and the person who called "bullshit" was right, the lying player takes all the cards from the pile and adds them to their hand.

If the cards are what the player said they were and the accuser turns out to be wrong, all of the cards in the pile go into the hand of the accuser. If two or more people call out the player in question and they are wrong, the pile is divided amongst all the accusers. Continue play after "bullshit" has been called. After "bullshit" has been called, another round starts with the last person to play. As the game progresses, it will become more difficult to get away with lying during a round, especially if the amount of cards you have keeps decreasing.

In the end, it will come down to luck and how good your poker face is--just try not to make any moves that are too risky, and don't call "bullshit" unless you're fairly certain the person playing has indeed lied about their cards.

Win the game by playing all of the cards in your hand. Once one person has played all the cards in their hand, they are the winner. Of course, most people would call "bullshit" on the last play of the game, but you can get around this by making your final play very subtly and quickly, or by calling "bullshit" on the person right before you in hopes of starting the next round.

Bullshit really is all about strategy, and the more you play it, the better you'll get. After one player wins, you can continue playing until there are two or three people left if that's how you decide to play. If you only have one card left, don't announce it in advance or let people know that you're about to win.

You can also take the bold strategy -- if you only have one card left, you can pretend to count off and say, "Oh, perfect! I only have one three! Method 2. Play with two or more packs shuffled together. This is ideal if you're playing with five or more people.

It'll make the game last longer and it will be harder to tell who is actually bluffing. This is a great way to recycle decks not suitable for normal card games. Change the sequence of ranks. Instead of playing the cards in ascending order of rank, play in descending order of rank. Start with twos, and then move back to aces, then kings, then queens, and so on. You can also play by going with the next highest or the next lowest rank of the person who went before you.

So, if that person puts down a nine, you can put down a ten or an eight. This will make it easier for each player to actually put down a card he or she has. Allow players to put down more cards than they said they had. This rule should be decided before the game starts to avoid any accusations of cheating. If this rule is in effect, a player can say he's putting down three cards, for example, while sneaking in a fourth card. You can still call "bullshit" on this player to check if he actually put down the correct amount of cards; if he lied, then he'll have to take the pile.

Allow players to put cards down when it is not their turns, but not the most recent player. Follow all of the same rules, but anyone can go at any time if the player who should go takes too long.

Allow people with all four cards of the same rank to discard them off to the side, when its their turn, face up, telling everyone what rank it is. This helps make a shorter game. If you have for say, 3 nines, try to call BS when someone puts down the nine, hopefully it has a nine, then you can discard the nines. So 3 of us are playing.

Person to the right has 4 8s. And person to the left has the rest. For your circumstance specifically, you may just have to play until the hands become more diverse for proper gameplay. Hi Howard, yes, someone can call BS on your last card discard, and someone often will. Hi Janet, absolutely, or they can lie about it as well. Split the cards evenly among players. One player may have an extra card depending on how may players there are.

All the cards are dealt and there is no stockpile for this game. The person that has the ace of spades goes first. To play, a player places his card s face down in the middle of the table and announces his discard. The turn then passes to the next player and they are required to throw out the next card in ranking order. In this example, the next card would be a two. The player has the option of throwing out all the twos in his hand in one discard.

If a player does not have a two in hand, they must discard an alternative card s but still claim it as a two, and hope that the other players believe them. If a player calls BS! If the cards do not match what the player stated, then the player that discarded must take the entirety of the deck into his hand. If the cards to match what was claimed, then the player that called BS! A player may not call BS! Would you like to try it? Our goal is to make great versions of the games you already know and love in real life.

It would make the game much better. A: We get a lot of requests from people that just want one tiny little feature added to a game. What they don't realize is that if we start implementing all the suggestions we get then the games will no longer be simple.

The number one praise we get is that the interface is simple and uncluttered and it's easy to play. That's very much deliberate. There is no login, no loading screens, as few options as possible. We want to keep it as simple as possible, and that means each game only has one set of rules, you can't choose variations, we try to add as few controls as possible to the screen etc. A: This goes back to simplicity again. We don't want people to have to login to the site. We don't want to keep passwords in a database and be responsible for them.

Your statistics are stored in your browser, we don't store them anywhere. That means that as soon as you switch browsers you won't see the same statistics. A: Yes, this site uses cookies. They are used for game purposes, like remembering your scores between rounds, but also to gather aggregate data on people's browsers, screen resolutions and more, which helps us figure out what we need to support.

Finally they are also used for advertising purposes. A more detailed description of our cookie use can be found in our Privacy Policy , and you can always reach out and contact us if you're concerned about it. A: No. In all the games the cards are dealt randomly at the start, and the computer players make their decisions based only on knowledge of their own hands, and knowledge of what has been played.

Basically they use the same information as a human player would have available to them. A: If you see an ad that is offensive to you then please contact us and we'll try our best to block it.



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