







🎉 Turn any gathering into a laugh riot with Kids Against Maturity!
Kids Against Maturity: Let's Go Edition is a compact, travel-friendly card game featuring 200 question and answer cards designed for family fun. Suitable for ages 10 and up, it blends age-appropriate toilet humor with hilarious gameplay that’s easy to learn and perfect for 4+ players. Whether on road trips, sleepovers, or game nights, this game guarantees quick setup, endless laughs, and memorable moments for kids and adults alike.















| ASIN | B0BFBVX2K6 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #454,215 in Toys & Games ( See Top 100 in Toys & Games ) #6,255 in Dedicated Deck Card Games |
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars (68) |
| Item Weight | 11.6 ounces |
| Item model number | KAM-CORE-2 |
| Language | English |
| Manufacturer | Nutt Heads |
| Manufacturer recommended age | 10 years and up |
| Product Dimensions | 6.5 x 3.52 x 1.3 inches |
K**A
So much family fun!!
If you want a great family game night I highly suggest this card game! We all get to play together and have a Great time. There are belly laughs galore. Our children are ages 11-17 years old and even the adults have a blast playing! We have already bought more packs to add to the fun!
C**Y
LOVE
My family loves playing game it only made sense to add on the expansion pack!
K**.
Not really new if you have the Illustrated Edition
We already had the Kids Against Maturity Illustrated Edition before receiving the Let's Go! Edition. It didn't take long to notice that most (maybe even all?) of the "new cards" in the Let's Go! Edition are already in the Illustrated Edition. It's not a big deal, as long as you aren't hoping to use it as an expansion with the Illustrated Edition. The Let's Go! Edition is definitely more compact (see comparison photos) and would work well as a travel game. 200 cards is still a lot to handle in the car, so think of it more as a small size game to pack for the hotel or whenever you're traveling to. If you're not already familiar with Kids Against Maturity, it's a "family friendly" alternative to Cards Against Humanity, or a gross out version of Apples to Apples. The cards are mostly potty / body humor in the Let's Go! Edition. Older kids will probably enjoy the gross out humor but beware, younger children will probably pick up some new language. Some of the cards skirt around questionable language by using words that sound similar, ex. Hugh Jass. There aren't a lot of these cards, so it should be easy to remove them before playing, if you find them objectionable for your family. One final note is that the Let's Go! Edition does not include any game instructions. The game rules can be found online if you don't already play Kids Against Maturity.
G**G
Potty humor isn't the way to raise proper grandchildren
My husband reviewed the cards and didn't approve of the humor. We won't be giving them to our 8 year old grandson.
B**N
a favorite in our house
so fun
P**H
Road Trip Royalty: The Portable Party Game That Mastered Toilet Humor
I honestly didn't think it was possible to get my pre-teens to look up from their screens during a four-hour car ride, let alone actually laugh with me, but this travel-sized card game managed to do exactly that. We picked up the "Let's Go" edition specifically for its portability, and it has quickly become the first thing we pack for any trip. While it is technically a smaller version of the massive original box, I found that the 200-card count was the perfect "Goldilocks" amount—enough to keep the game fresh for hours, but small enough to toss into a backpack or the glove compartment without a second thought. The gameplay is refreshingly simple, which is a blessing when you are trying to explain rules to a car full of restless kids. We loved the "Hairy Knuckles" rule—where the person with the hairiest knuckles gets to read the first question card—because it immediately set a goofy, unpretentious tone. Essentially, it plays just like the famous "adults-only" party games, where you match answer cards to a fill-in-the-blank question card, but the content here is tailored for a younger audience. I was genuinely surprised by how well the humor bridged the generational gap; the kids were in stitches over the endless stream of fart jokes and toilet humor, while my partner and I were chuckling at the clever, layered innuendos that went completely over the kids' heads. What really struck me was how this game turned a boring layover into a hysterical bonding moment. There is something incredibly disarming about watching your ten-year-old confidently play a card about "grandma's dentures" or "wet willies" to win a round. It encourages reading and quick thinking, but it masks the educational value so heavily in gross-out humor that the kids never suspect they are actually using their brains. The sheer variety of the 50 question cards and 150 answer cards meant that we rarely saw the same combination twice, keeping the shock value high and the giggles constant. I also appreciated the versatility of this specific edition. While we used it as a standalone game during our travels, we have since mixed it into our larger core deck at home to refresh our family game nights. It integrates seamlessly. If you are a parent who is easily offended or prefers high-brow intellectual discourse, this might not be the box for you. However, if you are ready to embrace the absurdity of potty humor to get your family engaging and laughing together, this compact little box is an absolute winner in my book.
M**T
Simple, fun, great family game!
This is a fun little game. It's a silly, family version of "cards against humanity" style. You have a card with a question/fill in the blank on it and everyone else has cards with various things on them and they try to make the funniest combination. These cards are a lot of silly potty humor, which the kids loved. It's fun and simple, a great game to just pick up and play!
D**H
Not inappropriate
I thought it looked like a fun game to get my kids reading. I'm going to throw it away. Many terms on the cards were; very their heads or just dirty. Like " Santa's big fat sack" or Mr. Hugh jass, or planet balzak, babysitter's boyfriend. Just gross. I don't recommend at all. My kids are age 10,8,5
Trustpilot
2 days ago
5 days ago