Overview

The Princess is locked away in her tower. Suitors compete to get their letter to her first — using 16 cards and social deduction. Each turn you hold one card and draw one more, then play one, following its action. Last player standing, or highest card when the deck runs out, wins the round.

2 – 4Players
15–20 minPlay Time
10+Age

Kaitlyn’s Review

Likes

  • Extremely quick rounds (3–5 minutes each)
  • Micro game — travels anywhere
  • Easy to learn and teach
  • Strong story and lore behind the game

Dislikes

  • Only 2–4 players without buying the premium version
  • Not much strategic depth compared to other deduction games
  • Not an all-night game

First Impressions

Love Letter is a micro game built around deducing what card your opponents are holding. On your turn, you pick up one card, hold two briefly, and must play one — following that card’s action. Guards guess an opponent’s card. Handmaids grant protection. Princes force discards. The person with the highest card wins the round.

Thoughts

The rounds are fast — almost too fast. You’re mostly holding one card at a time, and the mechanics change so quickly that deep role-playing or strategic misdirection isn’t really possible. This is my main gripe compared to games like Coup or Avalon, where you can lie about your role and build a convincing story. In Love Letter, you must follow what your card says. There’s less room for strategic deception.

It often becomes a guessing game rather than a deduction game. You’re tracking what’s been played (and therefore what isn’t available) more than actively deceiving anyone. When strategic decisions do appear, the round is usually nearly over.

The different editions are worth noting. Love Letter has been released as Batman, Adventure Time, The Hobbit, and many others. Gameplay is essentially the same across versions. The Batman edition adds a bonus point for eliminating another player while holding the Batman card — a nice tweak.

As a starter or filler game it shines. Perfect for opening a game night, filling a short gap, or introducing total newcomers to card game mechanics. The lore is surprisingly well developed — AEG wrote a full story connected to their Tempest game line (Courtier sets up Love Letter, Dominaire follows it). Worth reading the rulebook for if you’re into that.

The player count is limiting. Our regular group is 6 players and Love Letter’s 2–4 limit means we skip it often. The premium edition supports 2–8 but is significantly more expensive.

Conclusion

Love Letter is the right pick if you want something quick, cheap, and easy to travel with. It doesn’t have the depth of Coup or Avalon, but it fills a different need — the pure, fast micro-game slot. Great gift, great starter, great between-game filler. Doesn’t hold your attention all night, but it was never meant to.