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Never Have I Ever Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A never have i ever generator removes the awkward silence when no one can think of a good prompt. Instead of recycling the same five statements everyone already knows, you get a fresh list built around categories like Travel, Food & Drink, Embarrassing, Social Media, and Work & School — or Mixed if you want variety. Set how many statements you need, pick the right category for your crowd, and you're ready in seconds. The category filter does real work here. Work & School keeps things safe for office icebreakers and classroom activities. Mixed throws enough curveballs to keep a close friend group genuinely surprised. The statements are written to start conversations, not just score points.

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Select a category from the dropdown — choose Mixed for variety or a specific category to match your audience.
  2. Set the number of statements using the count field; start with 10 for a standard round.
  3. Click generate to instantly produce your list of Never Have I Ever statements.
  4. Read each statement aloud to the group and watch players respond in real time.
  5. Regenerate for a brand new set whenever the group finishes or wants a second round.

Use Cases

  • Running a quick icebreaker at a company onboarding session using the Work & School category
  • Supplying prompts for a bachelorette party drinking game without pre-planning the night before
  • Hosting a virtual Zoom game night by pasting 15 generated statements into the chat
  • Warming up a college orientation group before splitting into smaller get-to-know-you activities
  • Keeping a family game night clean and on-topic by selecting the Food & Drink or Travel category

Tips

  • Use the Work and School category for office icebreakers — it avoids anything that could make colleagues uncomfortable.
  • Generate two separate lists before the party: one to use, one as backup if the first runs short.
  • Pair the Travel category with a map game — players who put a finger down can point to where it happened.
  • For Zoom games, paste the full list into the chat before starting so everyone can read along even if audio cuts out.
  • Combine Mixed with a rule that anyone who puts down their last finger must share one more story — it extends the game naturally.
  • Increase the count to 20 for groups of eight or more; smaller lists run out too fast with bigger crowds.

FAQ

how do you play never have i ever with a big group

Everyone starts with ten fingers up. One player reads a statement aloud — anyone who has done that thing puts a finger down. The last person with fingers still up wins. For larger groups of fifteen or more, skip the finger-counting and just ask players to raise a hand or type 'done' in chat so answers stay visible.

is never have i ever appropriate for work or school events

Yes — select the Work & School category and every statement stays professional and classroom-safe. Avoid Mixed if you need full control over tone, since it pulls from all categories including Embarrassing and Social Media, which can get personal.

how many statements should I generate for one round of never have i ever

Ten to fifteen covers a solid round lasting around fifteen to twenty minutes. Generate twenty or more for a long party night or tournament-style play — you can work through them in batches and regenerate instantly if the group burns through the list.