Read this if the game doesn't load.
Introduction to Snitch
Have you ever sat around a table with friends, each of you glancing nervously at one another, trying to figure out who’s secretly selling you out? That’s exactly the kind of tension Snitch brings to the table. You start by dealing out coded identity cards, one of which marks someone as the titular snitch. Everyone else is an agent trying to root out the traitor but doing so too brazenly could tip your hand and make you a target yourself.
Each turn, you’re allowed to ask a specific question or gather certain clues, but the information you get is always limited. Maybe you’ll learn that someone isn’t the snitch or that a pair of players are definitely innocent, but you’ll rarely get a straight answer. It feels like a detective novel in miniature, with each bit of intelligence pushing you closer to the truth—and closer to pointing your finger at the wrong person.
What really makes Snitch shine is how it plays with trust and suspicion. You’ll see friendships fray as players start whispering theories in each other’s ears. Someone might pretend to be on your side, only to flip when they think they’ve got the real snitch cornered. Meanwhile, the true traitor has to stay cool under pressure, dropping just enough hints to avoid suspicion while steering everyone away from them.
By the time someone finally screams, “I’ve got you!” and reveals their accusation, the table is buzzing with relief, triumph, or downright indignation. Whether the snitch is unmasked or gets away clean, you wind up replaying that one moment in your head, wondering where you went wrong—or celebrating how brilliantly you read your friends. It’s fast-paced, endlessly replayable, and just the right mix of mind games and laughter to make any game night unforgettable.
Snitch
Torture the prisoner to get the valuable information from him in the Snitch game. Click on the question mark icon within the game to read instruction.