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A mini-game about pop ups, and the deviousness of websites and apps. EVIL CORP wants your data. It will use every trick in the book (and a few more, just for fun). Your mission is as follows: Do not accept any terms & conditions. Say no to all notifications. Always opt out of cookies.
A party game where you describe regular Terms under impossible Conditions. Each round, one player describes the words on a Terms card, while following the rule on their Condition card. Everyone else competes against each other to guess the Terms.
When Evil Corp asks if you agree to the terms and conditions, suddenly the “no” button is written in Klingon, or gets buried under a slew of confusing drop-down menus.
The game’s goal is to reject all notification prompts, cookies, and terms of service agreements, and while its 29 questions start out simple enough, they quickly take a turn...
INTERACTIVE: Terms and Conditions Game, is back! In this teacher-favorite activity, students must evade Evil Corp’s attempts to get their data (don’t worry, the game doesn’t actually capture any real data). The mission is as follows: Do NOT accept any terms & conditions ; Say NO to all notifications ; Always OPT OUT of cookies
Welcome to Terms and Conditions May Apply, where you represent the gates of the afterlife, and must balance your job with your own personal morals. This is a card-based game with just a dusting of divinity- if the divine worked a 9-5.
Terms & Conditions Apply is a really fun game about not letting EVIL CORP collect data about you. Play at: termsandconditions.game for free!
What is Terms and Conditions? A party game where you describe regular Terms under impossible Conditions. Each round, one player describes the words on a Terms card, while following the rule on their Condition card. Everyone else competes against each other to guess the Terms.
Inspired by the real dark patterns used by companies to harness and commoditise our data, the game’s rapid-fire, purposely confusing puzzles are hilarious yet sinister.
When Evil Corp asks if you agree to the terms and conditions, suddenly the “no” button is written in Klingon, or gets buried under a slew of confusing drop-down menus.