Skip to main content
Back to Fun generators

Fun

Random Party Dare Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A random party dare generator solves the most annoying part of game night: the five-minute pause where everyone stares at each other trying to invent a dare on the spot. Set difficulty to Easy, Medium, or Hard, pick how many dares you need, and get a ready-to-play list in seconds. Easy dares work for mixed ages and groups still warming up. Medium pushes people into mild embarrassment territory. Hard dares are for late in the night when everyone's committed. The dares are social, physical, and funny without singling anyone out — which matters more than people realize when one bad dare can kill the room.

Loading usage…

Free forever — no account required

How to use

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

Detailed instructions

  1. Select your difficulty level — Easy for family-friendly groups, Medium for friend groups, Hard for adults only.
  2. Set the number of dares you need using the count field, between 1 and 15.
  3. Click Generate to produce your customised dare list instantly.
  4. Copy the full list or read dares aloud directly from the screen during your game.
  5. Regenerate at any point mid-game to get a fresh batch at the same or a different difficulty.

Use Cases

  • Pre-loading 15 Hard dares before a bachelorette party so the host isn't improvising all night
  • Running a Truth or Dare game at a teen sleepover using Easy dares to keep things parent-safe
  • Scaling a game night from Easy to Hard mid-session by regenerating at a higher difficulty between rounds
  • Printing a batch of Medium dares as physical cut-out cards for a birthday party activity station
  • Icebreaking a corporate holiday party with Easy dares that won't generate an HR conversation on Monday

Tips

  • Start one difficulty level lower than you think you need — groups warm up faster than expected and you can always escalate.
  • Generate 15 dares before your event starts and screenshot the list so you're not fumbling with a browser mid-game.
  • For Truth or Dare, alternate between generating Easy dares early and Medium dares after the first full round to control pacing.
  • At work or school events, use Easy exclusively and read through the generated list before playing to approve each dare in advance.
  • For bachelorette or stag parties, run two separate generations — Medium for early evening and Hard for later — and keep the lists separate.
  • If someone refuses a dare, having a pre-generated backup list means you can immediately offer an alternative without losing momentum.

FAQ

are these dares appropriate for teenagers

Easy and Medium dares are designed to be age-appropriate — silly, mildly embarrassing, nothing that would concern a parent. Hard dares are better suited for adults. For teen sleepovers or mixed-age groups, stick to Easy and generate a larger batch of 10–15 so the list doesn't run out.

what difficulty should I pick for people who don't know each other yet

Start on Easy. Low-stakes dares get people participating rather than refusing, and refusals early on kill the game's momentum fast. Once the group has loosened up after a few rounds, regenerate on Medium to raise the energy naturally without anyone feeling blindsided.

how many dares should I generate for a group of 6 players

Generate 8–10 for a standard round — enough that no two people repeat a dare, with a few spares if someone wants to swap. For a longer session or multiple rounds, generate the full 15 upfront and work through the list, then regenerate at a higher difficulty when you're ready to escalate.