Play Rock Card online with friends for free
About the Game
Rock Card is a raunchy, adult-oriented party card game similar to Cards Against Humanity. The game is playable from 3 to 5 players, because 2 players will just be terrible.
Heads up: There are lots of risque and politically incorrect humour in Rock Card. Minors and those who are offended by these types of content should not play the game.
Gameplay
The gameplay is divided into different rounds. When the game starts, each player is given 7 random White Cards. At the start of each round, a player is chosen as the Judge who deals out a Purple Card for everyone else.
A Purple Card is one that has a _________ blank space in them. Below is an example of a Purple Card:
After the Purple Card is dealt, the other players must choose 1 White Card from their hand. Below is an example of a White Card:

Once all the players have submitted the White Cards, it is now the Judge's turn to pick which White Card will combine with the Purple Card to produce the most hilarious result. This judgement is entirely subjective to the Judge's taste/humour and there is no wrong or right combination.
Here's an example of a pretty good Purple/White Cards combination:

The player whose White Card was chosen by the Judge will receive 1 point for that round.
The next round will then start with the next player being chosen as the Judge.
Winning the Game
The 1st player to earn 5 points wins the game and goes home with (fake) bragging rights.
Can I play online?
Yes. Install the Plato app on iOS, Android, or macOS to play the full catalog with friends or matchmade opponents. You can also play Ocho online in your web browser — no install needed.
Can I play with friends?
Yep. Tap Create Private Game, then share the invite link or invite from your contacts. When they tap Accept, they're seated at your table.
Is it free?
Yes — free to play and ad-free. If you buy something, it's for looks (themes, profile flair), not power.
Is it fair?
Shuffles, deals, dice, and timers run on Plato servers, not your device. Everyone plays by the same rules and no one can peek at hidden information.
Is it safe?
You can block and report from profiles or chat. Public spaces use filters and human review. Some rooms use Chat Pass to deter spam, and privacy controls let you limit who sees you online.
Live vs. turn-based: what’s the difference?
Both are turn-taking; the difference is the clock. Live uses short timers for quick back-and-forth. Turn-based gives you longer — often up to 24 hours per move in games like Chess — so you can play at your pace.
Rock Card






