DeepTalk guide
Would You Rather Questions for Adults That Actually Spark Arguments
You're pregaming at a friend's apartment, the Uber's twenty minutes out, and someone kicks off would you rather with "flying or invisibility." Everyone answers in four seconds and the game's dead. Adult would you rather isn't about superpowers, it's about trade-offs that split the room and force people to defend a life philosophy over a drink.
How to do it in DeepTalk
Make both options genuinely cost something
A would you rather dies instantly when one option is obviously better. "Never eat cheese again or never drink coffee again" works because both losses hurt and different people rank them differently. If everyone in the room picks the same answer, the question failed.
Ask about adult stakes, not superpowers
Grown-up questions bite harder: would you rather take a 30 percent raise but work every Saturday, or keep your current salary and never work a weekend again. Money, time, relationships, and dignity are the levers worth pulling against each other.
Make everyone defend their pick
After you pick, you get one sentence to defend it, and anyone in the room can challenge you. Watching your most frugal friend argue for the raise-and-lose-your-Saturdays option tells you more about him than a year of small talk.
Let the room escalate on its own
Start with food and money questions, and save relationship and dignity questions for when the group is warmed up. If a question starts a five-minute argument, stop feeding new ones and let it burn.
Use a pack so the questions stay sharp all night
The improvised version runs out of good questions in ten minutes, and then someone says "flying or invisibility" and the energy leaves the room. DeepTalk has a dedicated would-you-rather pack written for adults, with dilemmas built to split a room. It runs free in the browser, so one person opens it, reads a question aloud, and passes the phone after each debate settles.
Doing this in DeepTalk
Open DeepTalk in the browser and pick the would-you-rather pack, stocked with adult-stakes dilemmas rather than kid stuff, so the phone keeps feeding the debate while everyone else argues. If the pregame runs long and the group wants a different gear, the party-starters pack keeps the same energy with a wider mix of prompts, and drunk-talk is there for the night that follows. No download, no sign-up.