115 games
Yahtzee
Catan
Carcassonne
Ticket to Ride
Wingspan
7 Wonders
Azul
Splendor
Dominion
Monopoly
Codenames
Rummikub
Phase 10
Skip-Bo
Uno
Skull King
Hearts
Spades
Euchre
Cribbage
Contract Bridge
Pinochle
Canasta
Gin Rummy
Rummy
Farkle
Qwixx
Yatzy
Boggle
Bananagrams
Words with Friends
Dominoes
Mexican Train
Triominoes
Mahjong
Backgammon
Sequence
Sorry!
Trouble
The Game of Life
Clue
Risk
Battleship
Connect Four
Othello
Chess
Checkers
Go
Mancala
Parcheesi
Aggravation
Kingdomino
Patchwork
Lost Cities
Jaipur
7 Wonders Duel
Terraforming Mars
Scythe
Everdell
Agricola
The Castles of Burgundy
Power Grid
Puerto Rico
Stone Age
Ticket to Ride: Europe
Dixit
Sushi Go!
Love Letter
Coup
Exploding Kittens
Telestrations
Pictionary
Trivial Pursuit
Apples to Apples
Cards Against Humanity
Wits & Wagers
Wavelength
Blokus
Quoridor
Hive
Takenoko
Tokaido
Race for the Galaxy
San Juan
Crazy Eights
Wizard
Sagrada
Bohnanza
Viticulture
Root
Great Western Trail
A Feast for Odin
Concordia
Isle of Skye
Lords of Waterdeep
Calico
Five Tribes
Parks
7 Wonders Architects
Cascadia
Point Salad
Skull
The Crew
Can't Stop
Hanabi
Pandemic
Forbidden Island
Machi Koro
King of Tokyo
Ticket to Ride: London
Carcassonne: Hunters and Gatherers
Yahtzee (Yatzy Extreme)
Gloomhaven
Spirit Island
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the board game score keeper do?
Every game gets a free score keeper: enter names and points and the totals and winner update instantly. Games with end-game scoring (like Wingspan or 7 Wonders) get a category calculator that adds up every scoring box for you.
Which games are supported?
100+ popular board and card games — from classics like Scrabble, Catan, Carcassonne and Yahtzee to modern hits like Wingspan, Azul and Splendor. Use the search and the family / player-count filters to find your game.
Does it handle games played to a target score?
Yes. For games like Catan (10 points) or Splendor (15 points) the keeper flags the moment a player reaches the target score, so the winner is clear instantly.
Are the scoring rules reliable?
Each game page lists player count, play time, year, and scoring rules with a source (Wikipedia or BoardGameGeek) and a verification date. The score keeper itself runs entirely in your browser — nothing is stored.