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Spot the Fallacy
spotthefallacy.online
Spot the Fallacy - Master Critical Thinking & Logic
Play the logical fallacy game and learn to spot fallacies in real life. Bust misinformation in news, social media, and everyday conversations.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/fallacy › created a mobile game to train fallacy-spotting — looking for feedback!
r/fallacy on Reddit: Created a mobile game to train fallacy-spotting — looking for feedback!
May 18, 2025 -

Hi everyone! I recently launched Spot the Fallacy — a mobile app designed to help people practice identifying logical fallacies through short, interactive scenarios. It covers classics like strawman, slippery slope, ad hominem, and more, with game modes like daily challenges and AI debates.

If you’re into sharpening your reasoning skills or just enjoy calling out flawed arguments, I’d love your feedback. Still in active development and open to ideas!

Try it out here :

Appstore - https://apps.apple.com/in/app/spot-fallacy-think-smart/id6743923575

Playstore - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.spotthefallacy.fallacygame&hl=as

Discussions

Looking to make a game around learning logical fallacies.
This could be incredibly fun, but the difficulty is that you're going to either have to implement a language system (yikes, that's quite a ways off) or just import speeches that humans have already analyzed for fallacies. And there's an interesting thing about fallacies - they depend on context. For example, you can make a sophisticated ad hominem, where you essentially state "this belief is causing you to be inconsistent", without demonstrating anything inherently wrong with the belief or how you get there. I'm having a hard time coming up with a noncontroversial example, but this comes up a lot with the moral argument for God's existence - some will respond by simultaneously claiming that there is no objective morality, and simultaneously claim that other people are subject to moral principles they're aware of. You can demonstrate the inconsistency and say the speaker must reject one of these premises, and you are making a serious logical case in doing so - however, that doesn't really do anything to the premise that morality is subjective. EDIT: A more clear example would be the slippery slope fallacy, where you invoke too many premises. But obviously, if you have certainty or very good evidence for any of those premises, like you do in math, you can't ever commit a slippery slope fallacy. And I brought all of this up because you're going to have to deal with those edge-cases, or else you may end up with something that promotes dogma rather than serving to cull it. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/fallacy
9
9
August 13, 2019
Created a mobile game to train fallacy-spotting — looking for feedback!
love the app! however, I ran out of quiz questions after 2 weeks, even though there are many fallacies that are listed in "study" with their definitions but have not been given any example questions. is there an update coming which will test all of the listed fallacies, not just the most common ones? also, there are a lot more fallacies that could be added to the master list. i'd be happy to help make it happen! : ) More on reddit.com
🌐 r/fallacy
8
6
May 18, 2025
Logical Fallacies Card Game
Shut up and take my money! More on reddit.com
🌐 r/gaming
11
51
January 1, 2018
Egregore vs Flower Game?

It was a metaphor. "Flower" pattern become the Vex in our physical reality.

More on reddit.com
🌐 r/DestinyLore
10
16
April 7, 2017
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Steam
store.steampowered.com › app › 2847380 › Fallacy_Quiz
Fallacy Quiz on Steam
Fallacy Quiz
As your skills improve, so too will your ability to discern between logical and illogical arguments in real-life situations! You also have access to an in-game glossary of close to fifty fallacies. Be better equipped to avoid being manipulated by flawed reasoning.
(9 / 10)
Price   $14.99
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Itch
timkrief.itch.io › games › featured › educational › $15 or less
Fallacy Quiz by Tim Krief - Itch.io
As your skills improve, so too will your ability to discern between logical and illogical arguments in real-life situations! You also have access to an in-game glossary of close to fifty fallacies. Be better equipped to avoid being manipulated by flawed reasoning.
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Teachers Pay Teachers
teacherspayteachers.com › browse
Logical Fallacies Game | TPT
Also included in: ELA Game MEGA Bundle - Literary Elements + Persuasion + Poetic Devices + More! ... fallacies, definitions, and examples. The first player to get a matching set of 3 is the winner! Each example card features a sports-related example that will appeal to middle-school students. Some are ridiculous . . . and some might seem just a little too familiar. After all, ... logical fallacy definition cards, and 35 clues to give students (in the form of definitions or examples of each term - students must guess the word).
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Baamboozle
baamboozle.com › game › 548708
Logical Fallacies | Baamboozle - Baamboozle | The Most Fun Classroom Games!
Game Code: 548708 · English 15 Public · Identifying logical fallacies · Play Study Slideshow Share · Nau · 551 · Use Class PIN to share Baamboozle+ games with your students. Upgrade · Google Classroom Facebook Twitter · This quote is an example of what type of fallacy?
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Fallacygame
fallacygame.com
Fallacy: The Game
Fallacy: The Game is a debating card game for 2-6 players age 14 and above. Take these fallacious, biased or bad arguments, pick a topic and start your debate!
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Lawforkids
lawforkids.org › home › programs › lre academy › games › play
Logical Fallacy Matching Game
Log in · Sign In · Logical Fallacy Matching Game · Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Contact Us · Find My Court · Legal Aid Resources · Youth · Contests · Explore
Find elsewhere
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Debunked
debunkedcardgame.com
Debunked
Debunked is a fast-paced tactical card game, in which players compete to debunk arguments, all while trying to prevent their opponents from doing the same!
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Sporcle
sporcle.com › games › tags › fallacy
All Fallacy Quizzes, Trivia, and Games
Fallacies That Happen to Be Logical · 446 · Faulty Reasoning Fallacy · 280 · Logic Fallacy game · 247 · Informal Logical Fallacies Matching · 229 · Blank Sheet Fallacy Quiz · 163 · Fallacies · 141 · Most Kudos Received · Logical Fallacy Matching ·
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ProProfs
proprofs.com › quizzes › science › psychology › critical thinking
The Fallacy Game: Interesting Trivia Questions Quiz - Quiz, Flashcards & Trivia
October 1, 2025 - Below is The Fallacy Game Interesting Trivia Questions Quiz. This is a quiz game designed to teach students how to identify logical fallacies in an argument. The fallacies covered are "Begging the Question, Circular Reasoning, Weak Analogy, ...
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Google Play
play.google.com › store › apps › details
Spot Fallacy: Improve Logic - Apps on Google Play
April 17, 2025 - 🎯 Master Logical Fallacies From Straw Man to False Equivalence, our interactive lessons and quizzes teach you 37+ common fallacies used in debates, politics, social media, and everyday conversations.
Rating: 4.9 ​ - ​ 32 votes
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Your Logical Fallacy Is
yourlogicalfallacyis.com
Thou shalt not commit logical fallacies
Get a deck of these pretty great high quality cards featuring 24 logical fallacies and 24 cognitive biases, as well as 3 game cards.
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Dontfallacy
dontfallacy.me
Don't Fallacy Me - Gaming To Make Arguments More Logically Sound
Don't Fallacy Me is a completely free, crowd-sourced, multi-player mind game! It provides a statement, then you name the fallacy, or fallacies, in that statement. Three difficulty modes with high score rankings.
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Genially
view.genially.com › 65a6fd43effe350014eaa2aa › interactive-content-logical-fallacy-clues-deduction-game
Logical Fallacy Clues deduction game | Genially
January 22, 2024 - Once you have figured out the solution, click on the magnifying glass in the center of the board to solve the mystery and obtain the key that will allow you to escape from the mansion. But be careful, if you answer incorrectly, you will be out of the game.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/fallacy › looking to make a game around learning logical fallacies.
r/fallacy on Reddit: Looking to make a game around learning logical fallacies.
August 13, 2019 -

Hey Folks,

I'm a software engineer who makes interactive web experiences, and believe recognizing fallacies are so needed today in such an information burdened world.

I came across this guide: https://i.imgur.com/30HPR9p.jpg

and thought:

"It'd be really great if a person could read a quote, and then guess whether it's a fallacy or not".

I imagine the flow of the app would be:


First Interaction:


"I have met a few people, and I conclude that all humans are ugly, evil, and smell like socks".

Is this a fallacy?

YES | NO

Clicks Yes


Second Interaction


"Which fallacy is this?".

Hasty Generalization | Genetic Fallacy | Slippery Slope | Red Herring

Clicks Slippery Slope


Third Interaction


"Incorrect. The correct answer is Hasty Generalization.

Hasty Generalization: When you have not studied enough examples for such a conclusion"

Next question.... repeat process.


Any thoughts on this?

Would love some help with generating a list. Is anyone interested in helping?

I can build the software/ui, but am not an expert on logical fallacies as I'd love to use the game to learn myself! 😅

Thought it might be fun to do with Trump tweets, but cannot find enough examples online.

Top answer
1 of 4
1
This could be incredibly fun, but the difficulty is that you're going to either have to implement a language system (yikes, that's quite a ways off) or just import speeches that humans have already analyzed for fallacies. And there's an interesting thing about fallacies - they depend on context. For example, you can make a sophisticated ad hominem, where you essentially state "this belief is causing you to be inconsistent", without demonstrating anything inherently wrong with the belief or how you get there. I'm having a hard time coming up with a noncontroversial example, but this comes up a lot with the moral argument for God's existence - some will respond by simultaneously claiming that there is no objective morality, and simultaneously claim that other people are subject to moral principles they're aware of. You can demonstrate the inconsistency and say the speaker must reject one of these premises, and you are making a serious logical case in doing so - however, that doesn't really do anything to the premise that morality is subjective. EDIT: A more clear example would be the slippery slope fallacy, where you invoke too many premises. But obviously, if you have certainty or very good evidence for any of those premises, like you do in math, you can't ever commit a slippery slope fallacy. And I brought all of this up because you're going to have to deal with those edge-cases, or else you may end up with something that promotes dogma rather than serving to cull it.
2 of 4
1
I would buy this.
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Educaplay
educaplay.com › learning-resources › 17632252-logical_fallacies_quiz.html
Logical Fallacies Quiz - Froggy Jumps
All games (Froggy Jumps): Logical Fallacies Quiz - Test your knowledge of logical fallacies with this quiz game!