A game in the making

Some games have a home advantage.
This one doesn't.

A phone-down card game for couples and families building a culture of their own.

Not therapy. Not trivia. Just the conversations you keep having to translate, finally turned into a game.

Try a sample card

65 cards · 5 modes · One Vault Rule. Free while in beta.

Subtitles, Please
Show — don't tell — how your mom said "I love you" when you were eight.
How a night actually goes

Four steps. That's the whole game.

Pick a mode

Five to choose from. Quick Laugh for a dinner party. Deep Cut for a Sunday.

Pull a card

The deck does the rest. Read it out loud once before you answer.

Answer, debate, or pass

The Vault Rule applies to every card. Pass without explaining. No explanation needed.

End with a House Card

One inside joke, ritual, or rule from tonight. Write it. Keep it. The deck grows.

Sixty seconds in

Pull a card.

Pick a mode. Tap to flip.

The card you draw is one your partner has probably thought about too. Tap the card to flip it. Hit reveal to see why it lands. Send a card to your partner if you're not in the same room.

Tap the card to flip
Game card prompt
Why this hits
What it is. What it isn't.

Three things this game isn't. Three it is.

Not
Therapy. Pass any card. No explanation needed. The Vault Rule is printed on every card.
A quiz. Nobody is right. Nobody is being tested. There is no score.
A trust fall. You never have to go somewhere you don't want to go. The deck follows your lead.
Yes
A phone-down ritual. Pouches zip. Phones go in. Then the game starts. The friction is the feature.
Cultural recognition with teeth. The laugh that comes from being seen. The sigh that finally has a name.
A box that gets heavier. House Cards stay. By session thirty, half the deck is your household.
Five modes. One deck.

Pick the night you want.

The same deck pulls different. Lighter for a dinner party. Heavier for a Sunday. The Vault Rule applies to all five.

Subtitles, Please

The cultural subtext underneath what just happened.

"Show — don't tell — how your mom said 'I love you' when you were eight."

Quick Laugh

Recognition humor. Safe to pull at a dinner party.

"Show the face your family makes when guests overstay."

Hot Take

Pick a side. Defend it. Keep it light.

"Shoes inside the house — civil war starts here. Defend your side."

Family Table

Built for a meal. Ends with a House Card prompt.

"Both your families show up for one weekend. What breaks first?"

Deep Cut

Slower. Heavier. Vault Rule is your friend.

"When did you realize they were doing the work?"

Nine categories. The whole emotional spectrum of a household.

Sample cards.

Subtitles, Please · Wait, That's Not Normal? · Guess Me · The Untranslatable · Family Group Chat · Plot Twist · Crossing Over · Hot Take · Receipts

Browse all cards
The deck that grows with you

House Cards.

Every session ends with a House Card. One inside joke, ritual, phrase, or rule from tonight. You write it. It lives in the box. By session thirty, half the deck is your household.

"Sunday is for slow soup."  ·  "We don't apologize over text."  ·  "Karibu means I have already set a place for you."

The friction is the feature

Phones in the pouch.
Hands on the cards.

Every box ships with two cloth pouches. Phones go in. Pouches zip closed. The game cannot start until they do. Designed to replace ninety minutes of scrolling, not ninety minutes of therapy.

"You have seven days a week for your phone. Your relationship gets one hour."

Who it's for

You just have to recognize at least one of these.

You don't need a label or a perfect description. If any of these feels familiar, your voice belongs in this.

The "Subtitles" moment

When the room is laughing and you're smiling along — understanding the words but not the history behind the joke.

The "Which one are you?" moment

When your child — or you — gets asked to check one box. As if identity worked like a multiple-choice question.

The Untranslatable

The word in your language that carries an entire philosophy. The concept your partner half-understands but can't quite reach.

The Fading Tradition

The ritual your grandmother did, your mother did less, you almost never. The one you're quietly afraid your kids won't know.

The "Whose Rules?" moment

When a parenting disagreement isn't really about parenting. It's two inherited ideas of what respect even means.

The "Where is Home?" moment

When someone asks and you pause. Not because you don't know — because the honest answer is too long for small talk.

How this game found its founders
Bill and Lili Omondi at home — portrait photo Bill & Lili Omondi · Nairobi → U.S.

We're Bill and Lili.

Our relationship started with small moments. Game nights, inside jokes, stories, and slowly realizing how much culture shapes the way we connect.

During games like Cards Against Humanity or Drawful, someone would reference a show, a childhood memory, a cultural joke that everyone else instantly understood. Bill grew up inside that world. I didn't.

It wasn't that I didn't understand the words. I just couldn't access the shared history behind them. After a while, it became easier to sit some games out than to keep feeling one step behind.

So Bill started learning my world too. Kenyan history, food, humor, traditions — and the little things that never need explaining when you grow up inside a culture.

The Third Culture came from that experience. The realization that connection gets deeper when people stop expecting one person to adapt and start becoming genuinely curious about each other instead.
Be in the first deck

Get the free beta deck.

The full 65-card deck as a free PDF. Print at home. Play this weekend. Tell us what landed and what flopped. Your feedback shapes the first print run.