About Us

This site started the way a lot of odd little corners of the internet start: by accident, scrolling through an itch.io tag page late at night looking for something else entirely, and stopping on a screenshot of a judge panel scoring someone’s attempt at a cartoon voice. The Choicer Voicer wasn’t what I was looking for, and it took a minute to even understand what I was looking at — a party game built entirely around doing vocal impressions, judged by a row of characters, with the whole thing skinned like a low-budget game show. It was one of those ideas specific enough that it had to be somebody’s actual obsession rather than a trend-chasing pitch, and that’s what pulled me in.

What kept me around longer than a curious click was how honestly the whole project carries itself. It’s early access, it’s rough in places, and its own community threads are full of people reporting a genuinely stubborn microphone bug right alongside people saying the five dollars felt worth it anyway. Most sites built around a single game smooth over that kind of thing. This one doesn’t, because pretending otherwise would defeat the point of writing about it at all.

So this became a place to actually sit with that game rather than skim past it: a full write-up on what The Choicer Voicer is, how its judged studio format and Dub Mode actually work, and what its pack-based customization lets players build for themselves. Alongside that sits a catalog of other games that share some piece of its DNA — party games built for a group, quiz and trivia formats, classic board games digitized for a quick round, the kind of thing that scratches a similar itch when you’re between sessions or just want something in the same spirit. Practical detail is woven into every write-up rather than bolted on as a separate checklist, because a tip means more sitting next to the mechanic it actually applies to.

None of this is run by the people who made The Choicer Voicer, or by anyone affiliated with them. It’s an independent project built by someone who found the game, got interested enough to keep digging, and wanted a place to put that down in more detail than a single itch.io comment allows. Any opinions here are just that — opinions, formed from actually spending time with the material rather than a press release.

If you’ve played The Choicer Voicer yourself, or you’re circling one of the games in the catalog wondering whether it’s worth a session, poke around. If there’s a game that deserves a spot here and isn’t showing up yet, or something on the site that’s flat-out wrong, the contact page is the place to say so — this is small enough that a single message can actually change what gets covered next.