



Cards Against Humanity: Family Edition • Ages 8+ • A Party Game for Your Horrible Family
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Description
• Cards Against Humanity: Family Edition is the classic party game you know and love, except now your kids can play too. • Millions of families agree: you will laugh so hard you pee. • Comes with 600 ridiculous new cards about toilets, butt spaghetti, and Mom’s friend Donna — all written just for the Family Edition. • Tested and refined with thousands of families over many years, and updated with fresh cards all the time. • Appropriate for all humans age 8 and up. • Sorry, not as fun as Xbox.
Details
General
- Age Range Description
- Kid
- Brand Name
- Cards Against Humanity
- Included Components
- Cards
- Unit Count
- 1.0 Count
- Model Year
- 2020
- Item Type Name
- Card Game
- Model Name
- Family Edition
- Manufacturer Maximum Age (MONTHS)
- 1188.0
- Manufacturer Minimum Age (MONTHS)
- 96.0
- Model Number
- FAM
- Manufacturer Part Number
- Cards Against Humanity: Family Edition i
- Manufacturer
- Cards Against Humanity LLC
- Material Type
- Paper
- Number of Items
- 1
- Language
- English
- Customer Package Type
- Flat Free Package (FFP)
- Is Assembly Required
- No
- Educational Objective
- Promoting family ties and social interaction
- Operation Mode
- manual
Features & Specs
- Number of Players
- 4-20+
- Container Type
- Box
- Other Special Features of the Product
- Family Edition
- Theme
- Humor
- Color
- Yellow
- Subject Character
- Family Humor
- Product Style
- Classic
- Grenre
- Family
Dimensions
- Item Dimensions L x W
- 8"L x 4"W
- Package Quantity
- 1
- Item Weight
- 2.7 Pounds
- Item Dimensions
- 8 x 4.1 x 2.7 inches
Frequently asked questions
- Is this version appropriate for kids?
- Yes. It says the game is "appropriate for all humans age 8 and up."
- How many players can play?
- The listed number of players is 4-20+.
- What comes with the game?
- The included components are Cards, and the container type is Box.
Customer reviews
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Great family game night upgrade – hilarious without crossing lines
We picked up the Cards Against Humanity: Family Edition after seeing how popular it is (and honestly, after our kids kept begging for something “like the grown-up version but not”). At $29, it’s a solid value for 600 all-new cards that are clearly written from scratch for mixed ages—no recycled tame cards from the original, just fresh, silly content about things like toilets, butt spaghetti, and awkward family friends. The game plays exactly like classic CAH: one black card with a prompt, everyone submits white cards for the funniest/most ridiculous match, judge picks a winner. It needs at least 4 players to really shine (works great with 5–10 in our experience, and scales up to larger groups), so it’s perfect for family gatherings, holidays, or game nights with cousins/aunts/uncles. What surprised us most is how genuinely funny it is for both kids (ours are 9 and 12) and adults. The humor leans heavily into gross-out, potty, and everyday absurd stuff—think boogers, farts, embarrassing parents—without any of the explicit, dark, or sexual themes from the original game. It’s rated for ages 8+, and that feels accurate: our younger one giggles nonstop, the older one tries to be clever with combos, and the adults end up laughing hardest at how ridiculous the answers get. We’ve had nights where we’re all in tears from laughing so hard. It’s family-friendly in the sense that it’s clean (PG at worst—mild words like “crap” or “boobies” show up, but nothing worse), but still has that edgy CAH vibe that keeps it from feeling like a boring kids’ game like Apples to Apples. The cards are a bit larger than standard CAH, so they don’t mix with other editions, but that’s fine since this is standalone. Highly recommend if your family enjoys wordplay, absurdity, and not taking yourselves too seriously. It’s brought us closer through shared laughs, and we’ve already played it multiple times. Worth every penny for the memories (and the inside jokes that now last months).
We picked up the Cards Against Humanity: Family Edition after seeing how popular it is (and honestly, after our kids kept begging for something “like the grown-up version but not”). At $29, it’s a solid value for 600 all-new cards that are clearly written from scratch for mixed ages—no recycled tame cards from the original, just fresh, silly content about things like toilets, butt spaghetti, and awkward family friends. The game plays exactly like classic CAH: one black card with a prompt, everyone submits white cards for the funniest/most ridiculous match, judge picks a winner. It needs at least 4 players to really shine (works great with 5–10 in our experience, and scales up to larger groups), so it’s perfect for family gatherings, holidays, or game nights with cousins/aunts/uncles. What surprised us most is how genuinely funny it is for both kids (ours are 9 and 12) and adults. The humor leans heavily into gross-out, potty, and everyday absurd stuff—think boogers, farts, embarrassing parents—without any of the explicit, dark, or sexual themes from the original game. It’s rated for ages 8+, and that feels accurate: our younger one giggles nonstop, the older one tries to be clever with combos, and the adults end up laughing hardest at how ridiculous the answers get. We’ve had nights where we’re all in tears from laughing so hard. It’s family-friendly in the sense that it’s clean (PG at worst—mild words like “crap” or “boobies” show up, but nothing worse), but still has that edgy CAH vibe that keeps it from feeling like a boring kids’ game like Apples to Apples. The cards are a bit larger than standard CAH, so they don’t mix with other editions, but that’s fine since this is standalone. Highly recommend if your family enjoys wordplay, absurdity, and not taking yourselves too seriously. It’s brought us closer through shared laughs, and we’ve already played it multiple times. Worth every penny for the memories (and the inside jokes that now last months).
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Ridiculously Funny
The family addition has all the obnoxious hilarity of the original, but in a more child appropriate way! My kids love it, and it’s been helpful in teaching my youngest to read. Nothing brings a family closer together like laughing together! Some cards are still a little inappropriate for younger children, but those cards go over my youngest’s head anyway.
The family addition has all the obnoxious hilarity of the original, but in a more child appropriate way! My kids love it, and it’s been helpful in teaching my youngest to read. Nothing brings a family closer together like laughing together! Some cards are still a little inappropriate for younger children, but those cards go over my youngest’s head anyway.

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Good fun with fart jokes
I enjoy the adult version, so I decided to give this a go with the wife and kids. Honestly, it's still really funny and still pretty gross, too. Kids picked it up quickly and we've been playing it on the regular ever since.
I enjoy the adult version, so I decided to give this a go with the wife and kids. Honestly, it's still really funny and still pretty gross, too. Kids picked it up quickly and we've been playing it on the regular ever since.
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Fun family game
Great family game. There are a few cards that are a tad more than I like for my eight year old but overall a good family game. Even made my grumpy elderly stepfather laugh!
Great family game. There are a few cards that are a tad more than I like for my eight year old but overall a good family game. Even made my grumpy elderly stepfather laugh!