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May 10, 2026
8 min read

Among Us Alternative for iPhone: 8 Hidden Identity Games to Try in 2026

Among Us alternative for iPhone: hidden identity and social deduction games

Looking for a solid Among Us alternative for iPhone? You are not alone. Among Us is great, but it was designed for separate devices and a live internet connection. A lot of iOS players want something faster to set up, playable in the same room, or just different enough to feel fresh after a few hundred rounds. This guide covers eight hidden identity and social deduction games that actually work on iPhone, with honest notes on setup time, group size, and whether you need Wi-Fi.

Why iOS Players Look Beyond Among Us

Among Us cracked the social deduction genre open. If you have played it even once, you know why the combination of bluffing, paranoia, and crowd accusations hooks people so fast. But the iOS version has a few friction points that push players to look for alternatives.

Each player needs their own device. Getting six iPhones into the same lobby over a spotty hotel Wi-Fi is a real pain. The task loop is also slow for groups who want a five-minute round, not a fifteen-minute one. And after enough games, the single-map crew-vs-impostor format starts to feel familiar.

I built Bluffin specifically because of a camping weekend where we had five people, two iPhones, and no signal. We wanted something with the hidden-role tension of Among Us but playable on a single device passed around the table. That use case turned out to be more common than I expected.

The eight picks below cover every scenario from in-person no-Wi-Fi nights to full sixteen-player Discord lobbies. All of them work on iPhone. Most are free.

The 8 Best Among Us Alternatives for iPhone

1. Bluffin

Best for In-Person

Bluffin is the pass-and-play social deduction game built for a single iPhone. One player sees a secret word, passes the phone to the next, and so on around the table. The bluffer gets a different word, or no word at all, and has to bluff through one clue per round without getting caught. Everyone gives one-sentence descriptions. The table votes. Simple format, messy arguments.

What makes it the cleanest Among Us alternative for iPhone in-person is the zero-setup entry. Open the app, type in player names, pick a category, go. No accounts. No matchmaking. No everyone-download-the-update. Works offline. With over 2,000 words across eleven categories and support for 3 to 20 players, it handles everything from a three-person road trip to a big family game night.

What players tell us most: the moment the real players start accidentally contradicting each other while trying to expose the bluffer is where the game really lives. The bluffer usually survives the first round by staying just vague enough, then panics in round two.

Group size

3-20 players

Internet required

No (fully offline)

Devices needed

One iPhone (pass-and-play)

Price

Free with optional pro pack

Round length

5-10 min

Best for

In-person parties, travel, offline nights

Want the full rules breakdown? See our complete guide to playing bluffer and spy games.

2. Goose Goose Duck

Best Free Online

Goose Goose Duck is the closest thing to Among Us on iOS if you want a direct upgrade. It runs the same crewmate-vs-impostor loop but with up to sixteen players and a much deeper role pool: detectives, morphlings, vultures, and jesters are just a few. The iOS app is free and the online matchmaking is active.

The catch: everyone still needs their own device and a working internet connection. If your group is remote and already on Discord, this is the Among Us alternative to reach for first. If you are in the same room with spotty Wi-Fi, it is the wrong pick.

Group size

4-16 players

Internet required

Yes

Devices needed

One per player

Price

Free

Round length

15-30 min

Best for

Remote groups, Discord squads, Among Us veterans

3. Werewolf Online

Werewolf Online is the digital version of the classic parlor game. Villagers try to identify werewolves hiding among them before the wolves eliminate everyone. With over 60 roles, built-in voice chat, and quick mobile sessions, it is the most accessible werewolf experience on iPhone.

The night-day structure feels slower than Among Us but rewards groups who enjoy building cases across multiple rounds. Good fit for 8 to 12 players who want the discussion phase to run longer than the action phase.

Group size

7-18 players

Internet required

Yes

Devices needed

One per player

Price

Free with cosmetics

Round length

10-20 min

Best for

Werewolf fans, large groups, role-heavy deduction

4. Spyfall Mobile

Spyfall is the location-guessing bluffing game where everyone knows the secret location except the spy, who must figure it out from context clues while trying not to get caught. The mobile app and free browser versions both work great on iPhone. You can run a room from the web app without any installs if half your group has not downloaded anything.

Rounds are tight at around eight minutes. Great warm-up game before a longer session. The word-and-question format feels different enough from Among Us that it refreshes a group that has been playing the same thing for months.

Group size

3-12 players

Internet required

Yes (browser/app)

Devices needed

One per player

Price

Free

Round length

8 min per round

Best for

Quick sessions, voice-call deduction, warm-up rounds

5. Suspects: Mystery Mansion

Suspects: Mystery Mansion replaces the spaceship with a haunted manor and the tasks with clue-gathering. Up to ten players take the role of detectives while one or more murderers blend in. The cleaner mobile interface and slower pace compared to Among Us makes it a good pick for groups who want the deduction without the task grind.

The mystery-movie aesthetic is a genuine differentiator. Groups who burned out on the sci-fi cartoon vibe of Among Us tend to stay longer with this one because the setting feels fresh.

Group size

5-10 players

Internet required

Yes

Devices needed

One per player

Price

Free with cosmetics

Round length

15-25 min

Best for

Mystery fans, mobile-first groups, slower pace

6. Town of Salem 2

Town of Salem 2 is the deepest hidden-role game on this list. Fifteen players, dozens of roles across Town, Coven, Apocalypse, and Neutral factions, and night-day cycles where role abilities resolve in the dark and accusations play out in the light. This one takes a session or two to understand, but groups who do invest in learning the role meta come back obsessively.

It is free-to-play and has a polished iOS app. Not the right Among Us alternative for a quick casual night, but an excellent pick for your regular weekly squad who wants something with more mechanical depth.

Group size

Up to 15 (or solo MM)

Internet required

Yes

Devices needed

One per player

Price

Free with cosmetics

Round length

20-40 min

Best for

Role-depth lovers, veteran mafia players, regular squads

7. Secret Neighbor Mobile

Secret Neighbor is the multiplayer spinoff of Hello Neighbor. Six kids try to break into the Neighbor's basement, but one player is secretly the Neighbor in disguise. It is more action-platformer than pure social deduction, but the hidden-role mechanic and the need to cooperate while distrusting each other gives it real deduction energy.

Available on iOS. Works best with voice chat. The platformer layer makes it accessible to players who find pure deduction games too abstract.

Group size

6 players

Internet required

Yes

Devices needed

One per player

Price

Free with in-app purchases

Round length

10-20 min

Best for

Younger groups, action + deduction mix

8. One Night Ultimate Werewolf

One Night Ultimate Werewolf is the official iOS app for the tabletop hit. The whole game is one round and ten minutes: secret roles get assigned, the night phase plays out with audio narration, then the table argues for five minutes before a single vote decides the werewolves. No elimination across rounds, no slow night-day grind.

The big difference from Among Us is pace. Among Us is a fifteen-minute action loop with task-based fakes; this is ten minutes of pure deduction with no movement and no physical tasks. Works around a table with the phone in the center as the narrator, so it functions almost like pass-and-play: one device for the whole group. iOS app is a one-time paid purchase.

Group size

3-10 players

Internet required

No (offline narrator)

Devices needed

One iPhone (narrator)

Price

Paid (~$4)

Round length

10 min per game

Best for

Quick in-person rounds, single-device groups, werewolf fans

Side-by-Side Comparison

GamePlayersInternetDevicesRoundPrice
Bluffin3-20No1 phone5-10 minFree
Goose Goose Duck4-16Yes1 per player15-30 minFree
Werewolf Online7-18Yes1 per player10-20 minFree
Spyfall3-12Yes1 per player8 minFree
Suspects5-10Yes1 per player15-25 minFree
Town of Salem 2Up to 15Yes1 per player20-40 minFree
Secret Neighbor6Yes1 per player10-20 minFree (IAP)
One Night Werewolf3-10No1 phone10 min~$4

Which One Should You Pick?

The right Among Us alternative for iPhone depends on three things: where you are playing, how many people you have, and how much time you want to spend per session.

You are all in the same room

Pick Bluffin. One phone, no Wi-Fi, 3 to 20 players, five minutes to the first accusation. Nothing else on this list gets an in-person group into the game faster.

You are remote and want the closest thing to Among Us

Goose Goose Duck. Free, active player base, bigger role pool, up to sixteen players. The safe upgrade pick for anyone who already knows Among Us.

You want something faster and simpler

Spyfall. Eight-minute rounds, no download required for web play, works great over a voice call. Ideal for a quick warmup or a group that has thirty minutes and no real plan.

You have a dedicated weekly squad

Town of Salem 2 or Werewolf Online. Both reward repeated play, have deep enough role rosters to stay interesting for months, and are free on iOS.

You want a ten-minute round and a single device

One Night Ultimate Werewolf. The phone runs the narrator, the table does the arguing, and one round finishes in ten minutes flat. Closest tabletop feel on this list outside of Bluffin.

You have quiet or new players in the group

Bluffin or Suspects. Both give players time to think before speaking, avoid the chaotic real-time movement of Among Us, and are forgiving for first-timers. For more on keeping shy players comfortable, our guide to party games for introverts has more options.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best Among Us alternative for iPhone?

For in-person play with no internet, Bluffin is the best pick: one phone, zero setup, works offline. For remote online play, Goose Goose Duck is the closest direct alternative with more roles and larger lobbies. For the shortest rounds, Spyfall Mobile wins at around eight minutes per game.

Can you play a social deduction game on iPhone without internet?

Yes. Bluffin is fully offline pass-and-play. One Night Ultimate Werewolf also works offline once the app is downloaded, since the phone just plays the audio narrator. The other six picks all require an internet connection because they run live multiplayer lobbies.

Is there an Among Us alternative that only needs one phone?

Bluffin is the only true pass-and-play pick where every player taps the phone in turn to see their secret word. One Night Ultimate Werewolf also runs on a single device, but the phone sits in the middle as the audio narrator while players keep their roles to themselves. Both work with one iPhone and no internet.

Are these games free on iPhone?

Seven of the eight picks are free: Bluffin, Goose Goose Duck, Werewolf Online, Spyfall (web version), Suspects: Mystery Mansion, Town of Salem 2, and Secret Neighbor all have free iOS downloads. One Night Ultimate Werewolf is a one-time paid app at around $4. Cosmetic in-app purchases exist in several titles but none lock core gameplay.

What hidden identity game works for small groups of 3 to 5 people?

Bluffin and Spyfall both run well at three players. At three to five, Bluffin's pass-and-play format keeps every round short enough that eliminated players never sit idle. Spyfall's question format is also tight enough to work with small groups. Among Us itself struggles below five players because the bluffer is too easy to spot by elimination.

How is Bluffin different from Among Us?

Among Us is a real-time action game where each player needs their own device and a live connection. Bluffin is a word-based bluffing game played on one shared phone with no internet. Among Us is task-and-murder; Bluffin is clue-and-accuse. Both have a hidden bluffer the group is trying to catch, but the format and setup are completely different. Bluffin is closer to Spyfall than to Among Us in how it plays.

The Short Version

Among Us is not going anywhere, but the iOS ecosystem has more hidden identity options than it has ever had. The list above covers every realistic setup: one phone in the same room, six phones on Discord, a browser tab with no download, or a ten-minute single-device round around the table.

If you are testing an Among Us alternative for the first time, start with Bluffin for in-person and Goose Goose Duck for remote. Both are free, have zero barriers to the first round, and cover the two most common scenarios. The other six picks slot in once you know exactly what your group is missing.

For a broader look at what is available across all platforms (not just iOS), the full best bluffer games for 2026 guide covers eleven picks including PC and console options.

Try Bluffin on Your Next iPhone Game Night

One iPhone, 3 to 20 players, zero internet. Tap a word, pass the phone, catch the bluffer.

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