30 Most Likely To Questions for College Parties (2026 Edition)
Most likely to questions college parties run on are not the same prompts you find recycled on a Pinterest board from 2014. A real college dorm in 2026 has its own grammar: the meal-plan PIN you forgot twice, the group chat nobody mutes, the 8am you swore you would attend, the TA you have a weird crush on. The prompts that land are the ones that live inside that grammar. Generic "most likely to be famous" does nothing. "Most likely to date a TA" gets a scream from across the common room.
Below are 30 most likely to questions for college parties, written for actual undergrad life in 2026. They cover the dorm, the dining hall, the lecture hall, the library, the class group chat, the gym, and the floor lounge. Written to work at a kickback, a frat formal, a sober dorm hang, or a 2am huddle when someone finally put down their Stanley cup.
The format is dead simple. One person holds the phone. A prompt loads on screen. You read it out loud, point at whoever it clearly fits, and physically pass the phone over. Five minutes in, someone is getting roasted for their Spotify Wrapped. Ten minutes in, two people are debating who actually started the dorm group chat. Twenty minutes in, you have a Wrapped-style summary of who got picked the most, who flew under the radar, and which roommate pair got matched on every single prompt. That last one is the screenshot everyone sends.
30 Most Likely To Questions for College Parties
- Most likely to fall asleep in econ 101
- Most likely to date a TA
- Most likely to use ChatGPT for the essay and then panic about AI detection
- Most likely to show up to the 8am still in last night's clothes
- Most likely to have a Notion template for the group chat's spring break plans
- Most likely to get caught streaming Netflix during a Zoom lecture
- Who's building a whole personality around their Letterboxd account
- Most likely to forget their meal plan PIN twice in one week
- Most likely to write their final paper the night before and get a B+
- Most likely to become best friends with the RA
- Most likely to Venmo-request you for a $2 coffee at Sweetgreen
- Most likely to live in the library during finals week with a Stanley cup and zero notes
- Most likely to DM their professor a meme by mistake
- Most likely to quietly leave the class group chat and hope nobody notices
- Most likely to text their ex after one drink at a frat formal
- Most likely to try to start a club nobody joins
- Most likely to argue with the syllabus on day one
- Most likely to drop a class after the first quiz
- Most likely to cry in the library and tell everyone they were just yawning
- They're the one who comes back from spring break with a 'new mindset' and a finsta
- Most likely to wear pajamas to the dining hall and own it
- Most likely to swipe a fork from the dining hall every single meal
- Most likely to disappear during midterms and resurface looking completely unhinged
- Most likely to pull the fire alarm trying to make ramen at 2am
- Most likely to post a BeReal six hours late with a party caption
- Most likely to have their AirPods end up in the dishwasher story by December
- Most likely to take three pre-game shots and fall asleep before the party starts
- Most likely to befriend the entire dining hall staff by name
- Most likely to take a 'gap semester' that becomes a gap year
- Most likely to graduate, get hired, and still show up to homecoming every fall
You need one phone, three to eight players, and a spot to sit. One person opens the app or this list. A prompt appears, say "Most likely to fall asleep in econ 101." The reader looks around the circle, picks whoever fits, and hands the phone over. That person reads the next one. Repeat until the round ends. The energy compounds fast because the phone physically points at someone every twenty seconds, and once the roasting starts, nobody wants to stop.
Rounds come in three sizes: ten prompts (warmup, fits between pre-game and going out), twenty (a full hang), or thirty (the version that ends with someone explaining their entire freshman arc to a roommate they thought they hated). The Pass the Phone app has a round picker and a Wrapped reveal at the end showing who got picked most, who slipped under the radar, and which pairs agreed on each other every time.
No app? Read down the list in order, take turns holding the phone, keep a tally on your notes app. Most groups do the manual version once, then download the app when they realize they want the reveal screen. These prompts work at a dorm kickback, a Greek week mixer, a sober floor event, or a spring break group chat warmup. No alcohol required. No specific gender mix required. Works for commuters, transfers, and international students just the same.
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What are good 'most likely to' questions for college parties?
Good ones are specific to the college experience and concrete enough that everyone in the room immediately pictures the same person. "Most likely to be successful" is too vague. "Most likely to use ChatGPT for the essay and then panic about AI detection" or "Most likely to forget their meal plan PIN twice" gets a real reaction because everyone in the dorm has either done it or watched a roommate do it. Each prompt on this page points at an actual recurring 2026 college moment, from the 8am walk of shame to the dining-hall fork that ends up in your cup drawer.
How many players is best for this game?
Four to six is the sweet spot. With three, the passing dynamic gets repetitive. With seven or eight, the reveal becomes a goldmine because you have enough data to see real patterns: who is the dorm phone magnet, who flies under the radar, which roommate pair always picks each other. The Pass the Phone app caps at eight, which is the natural ceiling before a college party splits into two rooms anyway. More than eight? Run two parallel circles and compare Wrapped reveals at the end.
Is 'most likely to' a drinking game?
It can be, but the prompts are not written as drinking prompts. The version most college groups actually run is sober or low-stakes: read a prompt, point at the person it fits, pass the phone, laugh, move on. Some groups layer on a sip rule as a house rule. A few of the prompts here do reference pre-gaming and frat formals because that is real college life, but no prompt requires alcohol to land. Dry dorm hangs, sober student org events, and RA-led floor nights can run this list as-is.
Can I add custom prompts, like inside jokes from our dorm?
The app does not support custom prompts yet, but you can mix in your own by reading from a notes app between rounds in the app. Custom prompt support is on the roadmap. In the meantime, the Mixed mode (premium) pulls from all 300+ prompts, and most friend groups find that covers their "but what about the thing Jake did in the dining hall" energy.
Can you play 'most likely to' remotely over Zoom or FaceTime?
Yes. The phone-pass mechanic adapts to a video call: one person screen-shares the list or runs the Pass the Phone app and reads prompts out loud, the group calls out who it fits, and that person becomes the next reader. You lose the physical pass, but you keep the reveal. Works for friend groups with people who studied abroad, transferred, or graduated and still want in on the dorm energy.
Are these questions safe for RA-led events or student organizations?
Yes. The 30 prompts here have no explicit content, no alcohol-required mechanics, no callouts based on any protected characteristic, and nothing that punches down. The roast targets shared dorm experiences: forgetting a PIN, sleeping through an 8am, swiping a fork. RA floor events, freshman orientation icebreakers, and Greek week socials can run this list without modification. For extra-safe contexts, the Pass the Phone app also has a Friends and Family mode.
What makes 'most likely to' work for college parties specifically?
College is one of the only times in life when ten people share a daily routine, a building, a meal plan, a class, a gym, and a group chat full of references nobody outside the dorm understands. That density is what makes the prompts land. "Most likely to quietly leave the class group chat and hope nobody notices" is hilarious because everyone knows exactly which person did it last semester. After college, that shared context disperses. The window for this exact game is short.
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