Funny Rice Purity Test — Party Prompts & Parody Rules

What is it? A comic relief spin on the Rice Purity Test built for icebreakers, sleepovers, or digital game nights. Instead of tracking intimate experiences, the funny version checks who has pulled harmless pranks, memed their way through class, or survived chaotic group chats. Use it to keep the vibe light while respecting everyone’s boundaries.

Party illustration with checklist items and confetti


Building a parody list responsibly

  • Swap sensitive prompts for wholesome chaos. Think “accidentally sent the wrong meme to a professor” instead of explicit situations.
  • Set expectations upfront. Make it clear that participation is optional and sharing specifics is never required.
  • Keep it inclusive. Avoid in-jokes that rely on race, religion, or personal trauma. Focus on universal campus or online moments.

Sample funny prompt buckets

| Theme | Example prompt | Why it lands | | --- | --- | --- | | Campus shenanigans | “Pulled an all-nighter, but for a meme template?” | Calls back to shared chaos without oversharing. | | Tech mishaps | “Forgot to mute on a video lecture and everyone heard your snack break?” | Universally relatable embarrassment. | | Group chat lore | “Muted the group chat for 24 hours and came back to 500+ messages?” | Highlights collective FOMO. | | Pop culture | “Quoted Vine or TikTok audio in public and someone finished the line?” | Keeps energy upbeat and social. |


Hosting tips for game nights

  1. Use a digital whiteboard or slides. Reveal prompts one by one and let players tally privately.
  2. Award playful badges. Think “Meme Historian,” “Dorm DJ,” or “Spreadsheet Gremlin.”
  3. Offer a co-host. One person runs the prompts; another keeps energy positive and steers away from peer pressure.
  4. Finish with wins. Invite everyone to share their favourite wholesome chaos story (if they want to).

Download bundle ideas

  • Printable PDF checklist with doodle icons.
  • Canva template for digital party decks.
  • Optional scoreboard template for ranges (10–20, 21–40, etc.) without naming exact prompts.

FAQs

Is the funny version still “purity”?
Only in name—it’s a parody. Make sure everyone knows it’s for laughs, not for comparing social status.

Can we mix serious and funny prompts?
It’s better to keep parody lists separate so players aren’t caught off guard by sensitive topics.

What about younger players?
Use the for-teens guide as a baseline. If in doubt, stick to PG humour and skip adult content entirely.

Where should we share results?
Range shout-outs (“I’m in the Meme Archivist tier!”) keep the mood light without exposing stories.


Keep the momentum going