Who's Most Likely (Imposter Edition)
The classic "Who's most likely toโฆ" with a hidden-role twist. Civilians all see one question. The imposter sees a different, related question. Everyone points at a player. Then guess who got the wrong question.
What you're doing
Each round, the app picks a real question โ for example "Who's most likely to ghost someone they've been dating for months?" Every civilian sees this. The imposter sees a sibling question โ "Who's most likely to plan a romantic proposal?" Same vibe, opposite direction. Now everyone privately points at a player who fits their question. Answers reveal publicly. Everyone votes for who they think is the imposter.
The challenge: civilians can see who pointed at whom, but they can't see WHY. The imposter's pick might look strange, but so might everyone's โ the question is open to interpretation.
How to play
- Role + question reveal on flip card. Civilians see the real question, imposter sees the alternate.
- Privately pick a player who fits your question.
- Reveal shows everyone's picks side by side.
- Vote for who you think had the different question.
- Round reveal shows both questions and scores.
Scoring
Same as Word/Number Imposter:
- Civilians who caught the imposter: +2 each.
- Imposter: 0 / 1 / 3 / 5 / 7 based on % of civilians who missed.
Strategy
- Civilians: pick someone everyone agrees fits. Consensus picks make the imposter's outlier choice obvious.
- Imposter: read the room. If the regular question is about something negative (ghosting), people will pick the chaotic friend. So you also pick the chaotic friend โ even though your question is positive (proposing). Match the vibe.
- Voters: ask people why they picked. The imposter can name their reason vaguely; civilians can defend with specifics.
When to pick this
This is the most personal of the imposter games โ every round names one of your friends specifically. Save it for groups with strong friendships where being pointed at is funny rather than uncomfortable. Best at 5-7 players.