Hunt at night. Blend in by day.
Werewolf in AI Werewolf (Mafia)
As the Werewolf, your goal is to control the table narrative. Wolfcha turns classic Werewolf into a solo experience: every other seat is an AI opponent, which means every claim and every vote has a measurable consequence.

Alex
calm, structured
Morgan
humorous, quick to react
Riley
aggressive, high pressure
Taylor
cautious, detail-first
Jamie
empathetic, trust builder
Casey
skeptical, logic heavy
Werewolf overview
What you can do at night, what you should do by day, and what winning looks like.
Ability
Each night, coordinate a kill target with the wolf team (in solo mode: the game handles coordination).
Night action
At night, decide who to eliminate. During the day, explain, deflect, and push a vote that benefits the wolves.
Win condition
Win when wolves equal or outnumber the remaining villagers.
Example AI seats (what a table can feel like)
Wolfcha is designed for solo play: each other seat is an AI opponent with a different style.
Alex
calm, structured
Morgan
humorous, quick to react
Riley
aggressive, high pressure
Taylor
cautious, detail-first
Jamie
empathetic, trust builder
Casey
skeptical, logic heavy
Skyler
observant, low talk
Quinn
balanced, mediator
Drew
storyteller, persuasive
Hayden
risk-taking, bold claims
Cameron
methodical, slow but steady
Jordan
quiet, late-game spike
Werewolf strategy
A practical set of mistakes to avoid, and habits that win more games over time.
Beginner mistakes
- Over-explaining every detail and sounding too prepared.
- Hard-pushing one player too early with no table buy-in.
- Ignoring voting math (who can actually be eliminated today).
- Claiming a power role without a clear follow-up plan.
Advanced tips
- Use tempo: decide whether today is a ‘solve’ day or a ‘confuse’ day.
- Create two competing suspicion chains so the village splits.
- Track which AI players are consistent; eliminate the one who anchors consensus.
- Seed small, verifiable facts (even as a wolf) to gain trust, then cash it in later.
Solo vs AI notes
- Some models are ‘logic-first’: they punish contradictions hard.
- Some models are ‘social-first’: they follow leadership and confidence.
- Watch who reframes the narrative after new information—those seats are dangerous.
Dialogue examples
These are realistic snippets of how AI opponents argue, pressure, and coordinate—tailored to this role.
Day 1: soft pressure without committing
A wolf pushes uncertainty and avoids a hard solve.
Alex
calm
I’m not convinced we have enough to hard-vote yet. Let’s list contradictions first.
Drew
persuasive
Agree. If we rush, we hand wolves a free mis-execution. Who sounded the most ‘scripted’ to you?
Riley
aggressive
Taylor dodged specifics. That’s suspicious. I’m fine voting Taylor.
Taylor
cautious
I didn’t dodge. I asked for ordering. If you’re confident, explain the exact contradiction.
Late game: the wolf sells a ‘clean solve’
A confident narrative can beat noisy evidence.
Quinn
mediator
We have two candidates. If we’re wrong, wolves win. We need a clear reason.
Jamie
empathetic
Casey’s logic changed after the last reveal. That’s a red flag.
Casey
skeptical
It didn’t change—I updated based on info. But Skyler’s vote pattern is inconsistent.
Skyler
observant
My votes followed probabilities. Casey is pushing me only after being questioned.
Quick checklist
Use this as a pre-game reminder (or between day phases).
- Pick a day persona: calm analyst, comedic deflector, or helpful teammate.
- Avoid being first to lock a vote unless you can justify it.
- Never contradict your own previous logic.
- When cornered, redirect to voting structure and alternatives.
FAQ
Common questions players ask about this role in solo vs AI games.
Can Werewolves coordinate in Wolfcha solo mode?
Yes—coordination is simulated by the game flow. You still choose targets and manage day discussion like a classic table.
Is it better to claim a role as a Werewolf?
Sometimes. A role claim should always come with a plan: how it will survive checks, votes, and late-game contradictions.
What’s the biggest giveaway for a wolf in AI games?
Inconsistency. Many AI opponents are strict about logic drift. Keep your story stable and your reasoning defensible.
How do I win as a Werewolf more often?
Use tempo and voting structure. Don’t just ‘sound good’—aim to shape who gets eliminated and when.
What should I track during day discussion?
Vote intentions, who changes their mind, and who anchors consensus. Those seats often decide the game.
Can I play Werewolf for free?
Yes. You can start a game anytime from the homepage.
Ready to play a solo Werewolf match with AI opponents?
Start a game in your browser. No party required — just you vs a table of AI personalities.