Frequently Asked Questions
Let's try to answer every question you might have — before the dare hits.
1. About Dare Royale
What this party is, who it's for, and how the vibe works.
Dare Royale is a real-time multiplayer truth or dare game. You join a lobby, pick a playlist of challenges, and play live with friends, partners, or your squad — truths for confessions, dares for action.
It's built for parties that want structure without killing the mood: private sessions, community playlists, profiles, and just enough competition to keep score.
Adults who want a flirty, social game night — couples, friend groups, squads, and anyone who likes a little chaos with consent.
You must be 18 or older. Some playlists and challenges are marked NSFW so you can keep things light or turn up the heat on purpose.
You can join, build a profile, play sessions, and create content without paying to get in the door. Optional billing and premium features may appear on your account when they're available — the core party stays open.
Play in the browser on the web, or use the mobile app when it's available for your platform. Real-time sessions, chat, and notifications work across surfaces so you can jump in from the couch or on the go.
You can also add the web app to your home screen for a one-tap party launch.
2. Getting Started
Joining the party and finding your feet.
Hit Join the party, create an account, and verify your email. Some invites use a code from a friend — enter it when you register if you have one.
Finish your profile (display name, photo, a little personality) and you're ready to play, invite friends, and start a squad.
It depends on how the party is running. When invites are required, a friend can send you a code from their account. When open registration is on, you can sign up without one.
Either way, invites are a great way to bring your people in so you land in the same lobby from day one.
Your profile is your player persona — display name, photo, bio, and how you show up to others. It's separate from your login email and password.
Other players find you by profile, send friend requests, invite you to squads, and see you in sessions and leaderboards.
Open Play, start or join a session, pick a playlist of truths and dares, and invite your crew. When everyone's in the lobby, start the game and take turns.
New here? Browse community playlists and challenges first to see the vibe, then create your own mix when you're ready.
3. Playing
Sessions, lobbies, truths, dares, and how a game unfolds.
A session is a live lobby. Players join, a playlist sets the challenges, and everyone plays in real time — responses, scores, and ratings update as you go.
Sessions can be private for your circle or open to people you invite. When the game ends, stats and bragging rights stick around on profiles and leaderboards.
Truths ask for an answer — a confession, a preference, a story. Dares ask for action — something you do in the room or for the group.
Playlists mix both so the night stays balanced. You choose how spicy each challenge is when you create or curate content.
Sessions track points based on the playlist rules — point limits, multipliers, and how the group rates responses. Leaderboards surface top players and squads over time.
It's competitive enough to matter, light enough that the real prize is the reaction in the room.
Absolutely. Start a private session, invite one person, and pick a playlist that fits your vibe — soft and flirty or full send.
Many playlists support small player counts so couples and tiny groups aren't forced into a crowd.
Players can leave a session when they need to. The lobby keeps going for everyone still in — you won't lose the whole night because one person dipped.
Hosts and members manage the room as the game progresses; check session settings for how your lobby handles joins and leaves.
4. Playlists & Challenges
The truths, dares, and mixes that power every session.
A playlist is a curated stack of challenges — your mix for the night. It sets the category, who can play (players, squads, or both), privacy, and the point limit.
Browse community playlists or build your own under My Playlists, then drop one into a session when you're ready to play.
A challenge is a single truth or dare prompt. Creators write them, tag them, and publish them for playlists and the community to use.
You can keep challenges private for your circle or share them so other players can add them to their mixes.
Yes. Use My Challenges to write prompts and My Playlists to bundle them. Tag content, set visibility, and mark NSFW when it belongs behind that gate.
The best mixes feel personal — write for your people, not for a corporate handbook.
NSFW flags content that's adult, spicy, or not safe for a mixed room. You choose whether to create, browse, or play NSFW playlists and challenges.
Respect the flag — if something is marked NSFW, assume the room opted in. If it isn't and it should be, report it.
5. Squads & Social
Friends, crews, and how you show up to the party.
6. Privacy & Safety
Staying in control and keeping the party safe.
Privacy settings under your account control who sees your profile and how you appear to others. Playlists, challenges, and squads also have their own visibility — private for your circle, public when you want the lobby watching.
Review settings anytime; you're allowed to change your mind.
Open their profile and block them. Blocking limits how they can interact with you so you can keep playing without the bad energy.
You can unblock later from your account tools if you want to reset the vibe.
Use Report on a profile, challenge, playlist, or other content. Pick a reason, add a short note if it helps, and send it.
Moderators review reports and act when something breaks the rules. Safety comes first — clear reports help us keep the party fun for everyone.
Dare Royale is adult and flirty, not a free-for-all. Play with people who opted in, respect NSFW flags, and stop when someone says stop — in chat, in session, or in real life.
If someone ignores boundaries, block and report. We take that seriously.
7. Account
Login, settings, and keeping your account yours.
Use Forgot your password? on the login page. We'll email a reset link so you can set a new one and get back to the lobby.
Check spam if it doesn't show up in a few minutes, and make sure you're using the email on your account.
Open Account → Settings. You can update email, password, notifications, privacy, and security options from there.
Verify any new email when prompted so we know it's really you.
Yes. Account settings include a path to delete your account when you're ready to leave the party for good.
Deletion is permanent — export or save anything you care about first. If you only need a break, privacy settings and logging out might be enough.
You'll get alerts for invites, session activity, social requests, and moderation updates. Tune what you receive under account notification preferences.
Realtime features keep live games snappy — leave notifications on if you don't want to miss your turn.