You can buy a 200-card party game pack at the airport for $30. You can download three different drinking-game apps onto your phone. You can carry a deck of Uno around the world and pull it out at every hostel.

You don't need any of that.

The best party games for backpackers are the ones that travel well, run on nothing, and work in any language. They survive when your phone dies, when the Wi-Fi crashes, when you're sharing a cramped four-bed dorm with people who don't share your first language. The fewer dependencies, the more universal the game.

Below are nine games that hold up to that test — picked for variety, simplicity, and the kind of group dynamics that make hostel friendships stick. All of them require zero equipment beyond what you already have. Most are 5 minutes to teach.

The best travel game is the one you can teach in 30 seconds, play with strangers who don't share your language, and forget to put back in your bag — because there was nothing physical to put back.

Why Equipment-Free Matters

Card decks get lost. They fall out of pockets, get left in hostel lockers, get gifted to a curious kid at a bus stop. Even the most careful backpacker eventually misplaces one. The phone, by contrast, is the one piece of "equipment" that survives a year on the road. It's always with you. It's almost always charged enough to run a text-based game for an hour. It works in airplane mode. It doesn't care if your bag goes missing.

Beyond convenience: equipment-free games are also more inclusive. The German guy who's been on the road four months has the same access as the Korean girl who arrived this morning. No one needs to "have brought the right cards." The game starts the moment everyone is sitting down.

A flat-lay of travel essentials on a wooden table — camera, laptop, phone, coffee — illustrating the minimalist 'less equipment, more games' principle
Less in the bag. More in the head.Photo · Unsplash

The Nine Games, Ranked by Universality

The list is ordered by the harshest test there is: can you play this with five people who share no common first language? The top is bulletproof. The bottom needs everyone to speak at least basic English.

1. Most Likely To

Oldest game on this list, still the most reliable. Read a prompt — "most likely to lose their passport on a wild night out." On a count of three, everyone points at the person they think it is. The most pointed-at takes a small dare.

Why it's universal: you don't need fluent English to point. The pointing is the answer. Even if half your group barely speaks the prompt language, they can still play. The only language barrier is the prompt itself — and you can paraphrase it in three words for anyone struggling.

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Most Likely To · 100 backpacker prompts
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2. Time Bomb

Captain reads a category — "Capital cities of Asia." Random timer starts somewhere between 15 and 60 seconds. Pass the phone after each answer. Whoever's holding it when the timer hits zero takes a dare.

This is the most fun you can have with a clock. The shake animation as the bomb gets close to zero turns up everyone's heart rate. It works in any language because the categories are just words: "Foods that smell weird." "Capital cities." "Verbs in your language for the word 'walk.'"

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Time Bomb · Hot-potato chaos in 60 seconds
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Three friends huddled around a single smartphone, mid-laugh — the hot-potato moment that Time Bomb and most NIGHT BUS games are built around
The phone-pass moment is the entire mechanicPhoto · Unsplash

3. Visa Run (Yes/No Confessions)

Yes/no questions about travel. Prompt appears: "Have you ever lied to a customs officer?" On 3-2-1 count, everyone simultaneously raises their hand if YES. The reveal is what carries the game — usually 3 to 4 people in any group of 8 will raise their hand for any given question, which always sparks 10 minutes of stories.

The simultaneous reveal is the genius part. You're not committing alone — you're committing as part of a group. People confess things they would never volunteer in conversation.

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Visa Run · 100 Yes/No travel confessions
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4. Backpack Roulette

Pull one random item from your bag. Captain reads a survival scenario: "You're stranded in a Mongolian winter." 30 seconds to pitch why your item will save you. Group votes the worst pitch.

This requires zero pre-knowledge. Your bag is the deck. Every player has different items. The game is different every time. The shy person who pulled out a hair clip suddenly has to defend it like their life depends on it. Magic.

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Backpack Roulette · Survival improv with your real stuff
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5. Hostel Olympics

Random physical mini-challenges. Recite the alphabet backwards in 10 seconds. Balance a water bottle on your hand for one minute. Stack five hostel pillows. Random player drawn each round. Fail = you take a small dare.

This one is the cardio of the list. Most party games are vocal. Hostel Olympics is physical, which means it physically wakes everyone up. Pull this out at the 1-hour mark when the energy is dipping. Within two rounds, everyone is laughing again.

6. Story Roulette

Draw a deep prompt: "Tell us about the worst night of your trip." 90-second timer. Tell the story before time runs out. Group can ask three follow-ups. Then next person.

This is the only game on the list designed to slow things down. Everything else accelerates the room. Story Roulette pulls everyone into one person's experience. After two stories, the dynamic of the group has shifted permanently. People know each other now.

A group of people sitting around a campfire at night, faces lit by the flames, deep in shared listening — the exact mood Story Roulette creates
Story Roulette territory — slow, lit, listeningPhoto · Unsplash

7. Lost in Translation

Foreign-language phrase appears with two possible meanings. One real, one absurd. Pick A or B. Reveal who got it right.

This one teaches as it plays. After 10 rounds, your group has learned saudade, nunchi, schadenfreude, hygge, and probably mispronounced all of them. Best for groups where most people have at least basic English, since you need to read the question.

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Lost in Translation · 50+ languages, real & absurd meanings
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8. Customs Declaration (Anonymous Quiplash)

Phone shows an absurd customs question — "Officer asks: what's actually in your suitcase?" — and the device gets passed around the table. Each player privately types one anonymous answer. When everyone's done, all answers reveal shuffled. Group taps the funniest. The author is unmasked.

This is the easiest big-laugh game on the list. No improv pressure, no spotlight, no fluent English required. The reveal moment — "wait, YOU wrote that?" — is the hook. Anonymity makes shy players go unexpectedly bold; the laugh comes from who, not just what.

Friends laughing around a phone screen as one person reads anonymous answers aloud — the central reveal moment of Customs Declaration
Customs Declaration — the reveal is the hookPhoto · Unsplash

9. Story Jenga

One opening sentence. Each player adds exactly one sentence in 30 seconds. By sentence seven, the story has to start climaxing. By sentence ten, it has to end. Group then votes the worst contributor.

The voting at the end transforms this from a "creative writing exercise" into an actual game. Nobody wants to be voted worst. So everyone leans in, scheming about how to make their next sentence not suck. The introverts and the extroverts converge.

A group of friends gathered around a phone screen looking at photos together — the natural endpoint of a successful round of any of these games
The kind of laugh that only happens with strangersPhoto · Unsplash

When to Play Which One

Pull a few of these out at the wrong moment and they fall flat. There's a rough sequence that works in most groups:

Opening (people just sat down, slightly awkward): Most Likely To. It's the lowest barrier to entry, the easiest to teach. Three rounds in, the room is warm.

Mid-game (people are committed but not yet vulnerable): Visa Run, Time Bomb, Backpack Roulette. Confession + speed + improv. The energy peaks here.

Deep-end (group has bonded, ready to go vulnerable): Story Roulette. This is where you transition from "fun party" to "people I'll keep in touch with."

Energy reset (everyone's been sitting too long): Hostel Olympics. Get bodies moving again.

For the loud, theatrical group: Story Jenga. Needs confidence, but rewards it tenfold.

For mixed-language groups (the truest hostel scenario): Customs Declaration. Anonymity removes the language barrier. Even basic English lands hard if the joke's good.

For the quiet, thoughtful group: Lost in Translation, Story Roulette. Less performance, more reflection. Some of my favourite hostel nights have been quiet ones spent on these two.

The Honest Caveat

Not every group is a game group. Some hostels, the vibe is just everyone reading their books and respecting the silence. Reading the room is a skill. Don't be the person who pulls out a phone and starts organising activities when nobody asked.

The right time for these games is when the room is awkwardly half-engaged: people too tired to start a real conversation, too restless to commit to phones. That's the gap a phone game fills perfectly. Twenty minutes of structured play, then the rest of the evening flows naturally.

The point isn't to play the perfect game. The point is to give a room of strangers permission to look ridiculous together. Anything that does that, qualifies.
A group of people sitting around a table together with drinks and conversation — the warm endgame after the games have done their job
The endgame — strangers, no longer strangersPhoto · Unsplash

All Nine, In One Free Game

If you want all of these in one place — no installs, no signup, works offline once loaded, free forever — that's NIGHT BUS. We built it for the moment you're sitting in a hostel common room with strangers and someone says "what should we do?"

Pass the phone around. The 1500 prompts and 15 games will outlast the evening. The friendships, hopefully, will outlast the trip.

If the awkward-silence stage is the part you struggle with, our companion guide to hostel icebreaker games covers the opening 20 minutes more deeply. And if your group is about to set off on a long ride together, the same nine games translate well to the road — see the notes on travel games for long bus journeys. If you're still figuring out where to backpack in the first place, our destination roundup of 10 backpacker-friendly countries for 2025–2026 picks the regions with the densest hostel scenes — exactly where these games work best. And for travellers who keep telling themselves they need fluent English first, our guide to solo travel without English covers exactly why these point-and-vote games were built for linguistically mixed groups.

Once your group is mid-game and someone's screaming at the top bunk, you'll also want the unwritten rules of hostel dorms — quiet hours, the bottom-bunk hierarchy, what kills a vibe faster than anything. And if your travel partner isn't into loud common-room games, send them our playbook for introverted travellers who want to make friends without burning out by 9 p.m.

Published by NIGHT BUS · 2026 · The Blog