Saturday morning. Your child slides a board game across the breakfast table with the kind of hope usually reserved for new gaming consoles. 'Everyone at school plays this,' they say, which is either completely true or a very practiced lie. You pull up the reviews while sipping lukewarm coffee and discover something unexpected: Codenames isn't a flash-in-the-pan trend. It's the real deal.

See it, Dad? →
Kid
Dad, Codenames is literally the best game ever made. Everyone's playing it. Can we please get it?
Dad
I mean, the reviews are genuinely impressive here. But let's think about whether we actually need this.
Kid
We NEED it. It's about giving clues and guessing words. It's strategy and teamwork and—
Dad
Okay, you've convinced me. But not because of peer pressure. Because 29,000 people aren't wrong.

What Is It?

Codenames is a deceptively simple party game where two teams compete to identify their secret agents based on one-word clues. One player gives hints, teammates guess the words, and everyone either feels like a genius or wonders why they thought 'pyramid' was obviously about socks. It's the kind of game that actually gets played repeatedly, not shoved in the closet after three weeks.

What Does the Internet Think?

This game has a 4.8-star rating across nearly 29,000 reviews. That's not algorithmic luck or review-bombing—that's sustained, genuine approval from tens of thousands of actual humans. The game consistently shows up in 'best party games' lists, and people keep buying it, which suggests they're not returning it in disgust. ★★★★½ across 29,000 reviews.

✅ Yes.
★★★★½ 4.8 stars  ·  29,000 reviews

YES. Buy it. A 4.8-star average with that many reviews is as close to 'this is objectively good' as consumer products get. Your kid is right—this one has staying power. It's the rare game that appeals to everyone from eight to eighty, doesn't require a PhD to learn, and won't be forgotten by next month. Your money is safe here.

Check Price on Amazon →

💡 We Have Something Like That At Home

Codenames: Duels Edition
Same brilliant game, designed specifically for two players instead of teams—saves you the full-price investment if you want to test the waters first.
See more like this on Amazon →