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Cards Against Humanity – The Canadian Edition Explained

Cards Against Humanity is the most popular adult party card game in Canada – and the Canadian Edition is the version that truly feels like home. Released in 2014, the Canadian Edition replaces American cultural references with Canadian ones, transforming the game from a foreign import into something that speaks directly to Canadian experiences, humour, and identity.

If you have only ever played the American base game, the Canadian Edition is a revelation. References to Tim Hortons, poutine, Saskatchewan, Hockey Night in Canada, and the eternal Canadian struggle of saying sorry land with a recognition and immediacy that American references simply cannot match. The humour feels native rather than translated, and the game becomes something uniquely and unmistakably Canadian.

This guide covers everything you need to know about the Canadian Edition – what makes it different from the American version, which Canadian references it includes, how it works with other expansions, and where to buy it across Canada.

Cards Against Humanity: Canadian Edition at a Glance

CategoryDetail
GameCards Against Humanity: Canadian Edition
Players4–20+ (best with 6–10)
Playing time30–90 minutes
Age18+ (mature content)
Price (CAD)$35–50
ContentCanadian cultural references, politics, geography, media
CompatibilityFully compatible with base game and all expansions
Released2014 (original CAH: 2011)
Best forCanadian adults with a dark sense of humour

What Makes the Canadian Edition Different?

The Canadian Edition contains the same number of cards as the American base game – 550 cards total, consisting of 460 White Cards (answer cards) and 90 Black Cards (question/prompt cards). The rules are identical. The card quality and box design are the same. What changes is the content.

American cultural references have been replaced with Canadian equivalents. Instead of jokes about Texas and the NFL, you get jokes about Saskatchewan and the CBC. Instead of American fast food chains, you get Tim Hortons and Swiss Chalet. Instead of American political references, you get Justin Trudeau, the NDP, and uniquely Canadian policy debates like the seal hunt and equalization payments.

The result is a version of the game that resonates with Canadian players in a way the American version simply cannot. The recognition humour – the instant connection when a reference lands perfectly – creates moments of laughter that are genuinely different from the base game.

★  Can You Mix Canadian and American Cards? Yes – absolutely. The Canadian Edition is fully compatible with the American base game and all expansion packs. Many Canadian players own both editions and mix them together, creating a hybrid deck that includes both Canadian and American references. The cards are the same size, same quality, and work seamlessly together.

Canadian vs. American: What Got Replaced?

The table below shows examples of the types of content that differ between the American and Canadian editions. These examples illustrate how the Canadian Edition feels genuinely native to Canada rather than a simple translation.

CategoryAmerican EditionCanadian Edition
Fast foodMcDonald’s, Taco BellTim Hortons, Harvey’s, Swiss Chalet
GeographyTexas, FloridaSaskatchewan, Newfoundland, Moose Jaw
PoliticsRepublicans, DemocratsNDP, Conservative Party, Justin Trudeau
MediaNFL, HollywoodCBC, Hockey Night in Canada, Degrassi
CultureAmerican DreamSaying ‘sorry’, two official languages, multiculturalism
IconsBald eagle, Mount RushmoreMoose, beaver, Terry Fox, Rick Mercer
FoodHot dogs, apple piePoutine, ketchup chips, Nanaimo bars, Kraft Dinner
WeatherHurricanes, tornadoesMinus 40 degrees, ice storms, Snowmageddon

The replacements go beyond simple substitutions. The Canadian Edition includes references that would be completely incomprehensible to Americans – jokes about Newfoundland culture, Prairie winter survival, the Tragically Hip, and quintessentially Canadian debates like bilingualism and the monarchy. These are not just Canadian versions of American jokes – they are jokes that could only exist in a Canadian context.

Compatibility with Expansions

One of the strengths of the Canadian Edition is its full compatibility with the extensive Cards Against Humanity expansion ecosystem. The table below covers which expansions work with the Canadian Edition.

Expansion / EditionCompatible with Canadian?Notes
Base game (US edition)YesMix freely – Canadian cards work with any CAH deck
Red, Blue, Green BoxesYesAll colour box expansions mix seamlessly
Bigger, Blacker BoxYesStorage box holds Canadian + all expansions
Period PackYesFemale anatomy humor – universal, not region-specific
Science PackYesScience humor transcends borders
Fantasy PackYesGaming/fantasy references work in both countries
90s Nostalgia PackYesMost 90s pop culture shared between US/Canada
College PackYesUniversity culture is similar in both countries
Canadian-specific expansionsLimitedNo major Canadian-only expansions released yet
★  Building the Ultimate Canadian Deck Many Canadian players build custom decks that combine the Canadian Edition with select American expansions. A popular combination is Canadian Edition + Science Pack + Period Pack + Fantasy Pack – this creates a deck with strong Canadian content plus universally funny non-regional humor. Store everything in the Bigger, Blacker Box for easy organization.

Where to Buy the Canadian Edition in Canada

The Canadian Edition is widely available across Canada through multiple retail channels. The table below covers the most reliable sources.

RetailerAvailabilityPrice Range (CAD)Shipping
Amazon CanadaExcellent$35–45Free with Prime
Indigo / ChaptersGood (in-store + online)$40–50Free over $35
Walmart CanadaLimited (select stores)$35–40Free over $35
Local game storesVaries by store$40–50N/A (in-person)
cardsagainsthumanity.comDirect from publisher$40 USD + shippingShips to Canada
EB Games / GameStopLimited$40–50In-store or free over $35

The Canadian Edition typically retails for $35 to $50 CAD depending on the retailer and any current promotions. This is roughly the same price as the American base game in Canada, making the Canadian Edition an easy choice for Canadian buyers.

Cards Against Humanity encourages players to modify the rules to suit their group. The table below covers the most popular house rules used by Canadian players, as documented by the Cards Against Humanity community.

House RuleWhat It DoesEffect on Game
God Is DeadEliminate all rules – play any number of White Cards per Black CardCreates chaos and more creative combinations
Rebooting the UniverseDiscard all White Cards and draw new hands when game feels staleRefreshes gameplay mid-session
Packing HeatDraw an extra White Card each turn but must have 8 in hand before playingMore options, faster play
Rando CardrissianDeal one random White Card each round from the deckRandom card often wins – hilarious
Never Have I EverDiscard cards you don’t understand and draw replacementsLevels the playing field for pop culture knowledge
Happy EndingWhen a player reaches 5 Black Cards, everyone picks their favourite White Card for a final haiku roundCeremonial game ending
Survival of the FittestBottom two scorers each round must swap one White Card with each otherRedistributes power, helps losing players

The official Cards Against Humanity website includes a full list of suggested house rules at cardsagainsthumanity.com. Many Canadian groups develop their own unique variations – the game’s flexible structure rewards creativity.

Who Is the Canadian Edition For?

The Canadian Edition is ideal for Canadian adults who enjoy dark, irreverent humor and want a version of Cards Against Humanity that speaks directly to Canadian experiences. It works best with groups of 6 to 10 players who share a similar sense of humor and comfort level with edgy content.

  • Buy the Canadian Edition if: You are Canadian, your game group is primarily Canadian, and you want references that land with maximum impact for Canadian players.
  • Buy the American edition if: You play with a mix of Canadian and international players, or you prefer the broader international appeal of American pop culture references.
  • Buy both if: You want the flexibility to customize your deck with the best cards from each edition and the widest range of content.

For most Canadian groups playing primarily with other Canadians, the Canadian Edition is the obvious choice. The recognition humor and culturally specific content create a genuinely different and superior experience for Canadian players.

Tips for Your First Game with the Canadian Edition

If you are introducing the Canadian Edition to a group for the first time, a few simple tips will help ensure everyone has a great experience.

  • Start with a conversation about content. Cards Against Humanity deliberately pushes boundaries – make sure everyone in your group is comfortable with edgy humor before you start.
  • Play the first round with all cards visible as a practice round. This lets new players see the full range of content and understand what the game is about without the pressure of competition.
  • Encourage creativity over shock value. The best Cards Against Humanity answers are often the cleverest, not the most offensive.
  • Take breaks. Sessions longer than 90 minutes can feel exhausting – most groups play for 45 to 60 minutes, then switch to a different game or take a break.
  • Respect the Czar’s decision. The Card Czar’s choice is final each round – no arguments, no lobbying, no explaining your card after the fact. This keeps the game moving and preserves the anonymous submission mechanic.

Summary – The Canadian Edition Is the Canadian Choice

For Canadian players, the Canadian Edition of Cards Against Humanity is not just a novelty – it is genuinely the best version of the game. The cultural specificity, the recognition humor, and the feeling of playing a game that was made for Canadians by people who understand Canadian culture create an experience that the American base game simply cannot match.

Pick up a copy at your nearest Canadian retailer, invite 5 to 9 friends, and deal the cards. The most popular adult party card game in Canada is waiting – in the version that actually speaks Canadian.

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