Blackmail Bank is a party game for 4–10 players where everyone submits a secret before the game starts — those secrets are then dealt as anonymous cards that players can spend, reveal, or use for leverage during the night.

410 players

The Party Game Where Secrets Are Currency

Submit dirt before the game. Pay up or be exposed.

If Never Have I Ever feels too tame and Truth or Dare is too predictable, Blackmail Bank is the upgrade. The difference is stakes: your secret isn't just confessed and forgotten — it's a card in someone else's hand that they can use against you later. The secrets are submitted anonymously before the game starts, so no one knows whose dirt they're holding until the reveal.

Kaise khelein

01

Before the game starts, every player privately submits one secret or confession on their phone.

02

The phone shuffles and deals the secrets out as anonymous cards — you get someone else's secret, not your own.

03

Play through rounds where secrets can be spent, revealed, or used for leverage. The player with the most blackmail power at the end wins.

Do I have to reveal a real secret?

You can submit something real or something entertaining — the game works either way. The more honest the room, the better the game.

Who sees my secret?

Your secret is dealt to another player anonymously. No one knows whose secret is whose until the reveal.

How many players?

Blackmail Bank works with 4 to 10 players.

Is it awkward?

Deliberately. That's the point. But it's the good kind of awkward — the kind that makes the night memorable.