How to share single-player games with friends
Turn one-player games into fun group sessions with controller passing, score attacks, timers, and simple house rules that keep everyone involved.
Share single-player games by giving the group one clear turn rule, one goal everyone understands, and one visible way to track the result. Couch Pals helps with the parts that usually get messy: turns, timers, scores, objectives, penalties, and winners.
Some of the best game nights still start the old way: one screen, one controller, and everyone leaning in when a run gets close.
A single-player game becomes group-friendly when nobody has to argue about whose turn it is, what counts, or who is winning. Pick a format, pass the controller, and let Couch Pals keep the session fair.
Use a simple game-night formula
Start with four decisions: when the controller changes hands, what each player is trying to do, what result gets recorded, and when the session ends.
Keep those rules small enough to explain before the next snack bowl reaches the table. A good rule sounds like: one life per turn, three attempts each, ten minutes per player, or first person to clear one objective.
- Turn rule: life, level, attempt, timer, or objective.
- Goal: survive longer, score higher, clear faster, or complete more objectives.
- Score: time, points, distance, progress, deaths, penalties, or custom marks.
- Winner: highest score, lowest time, fewest mistakes, most progress, or first clear.
Pick the format that matches the game
The easiest format is usually the one the game already suggests. Arcade games want scores. Racing games want times. Tough games want survival. Open-world games want checklists.
When the group can understand the result at a glance, the room stays involved even while one person is holding the controller.
- Hard games: one life or one boss attempt per turn.
- Racing games: same route, same car class, best time wins.
- Score-heavy games: equal attempts, highest score wins.
- Open-world games: give points for photos, landmarks, stunts, finds, or route goals.
Recommended setups to try
Hard-game hotseat
Best for Roguelikes, tough platformers, action games, boss fights, and survival runs. How it works Pass the controller after one life, one boss attempt, or a short timer. Fewest mistakes, most progress, or most clears wins. Let's Play!Score attack
Best for Arcade games, rhythm games, shooters, pinball, stunt modes, and score screens. How it works Everyone gets the same number of attempts. Highest score wins, with combo or clean-run tiebreakers when needed. Let's Play!Set up a shared single-player game night
Open Couch Pals, choose a session mode, add the players on the couch, and let the app handle the turns and scoreboard.
Start with Couch PalsFAQ
How do you play single-player games with friends?
Choose a turn rule, agree on one goal, and track each player's result. The game stays single-player, but the session becomes a shared challenge around the screen.
What does pass-the-controller mean?
Pass-the-controller means one player takes a turn, then hands the controller to the next player after a life, level, attempt, timer, or objective.
Can Couch Pals add multiplayer to a single-player game?
No. Couch Pals does not modify games or add co-op. It helps your group run turns, timers, scores, objectives, penalties, and winners around the game.
Keep building better game nights
Browse more guides for ways to turn games without couch co-op into shared local challenges.
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