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Survival dossier

Bunker — survival dossier

A concise guide to Bunker online: how the match flows, which phases appear in a round, what traits mean, and how voting works.

Rules, phases, and character traits

Rules, phases, and character traits

This Wiki explains how Bunker online works in RageLobby without spoiling every card surprise. It helps new players, hosts, and groups align on the rules before a match.

About the game

Disaster, shelter, and group choice

Bunker begins after a disaster: the world has already changed, and a group of survivors has found a shelter with limited resources. There may not be enough room for everyone, so each player presents a character and tries to prove their value to the future group.

Players reveal traits step by step, analyze risk, and compare strengths. A profession can be decisive, health can create danger, inventory can save a situation, and additional information can change the group’s opinion. A good match depends on arguments, memory, and persuasion.

Phases

Round flow: cards, discussion, and voting

A round usually has several steps. First, information about the bunker or conditions is revealed. Then players reveal character traits. After that, the discussion begins: who is useful, who is risky, which resources are missing, and who could be left outside the shelter.

When the group is ready, voting begins. Players vote for a candidate to remove or for a decision that moves the match toward the finale. If there is a tie, a revote can happen. After the result, the server applies the consequences and the match moves to the next round or final summary.

Traits

Professions, health, inventory, and special conditions

A character card set describes more than a single strength. Profession and hobby show skills. Health affects risk. Inventory and backpack cards add items that may become critical in a specific disaster. Personal traits and additional information create reasons for debate.

There is no universally best character. During a nuclear winter, one set of skills may matter; during a viral threat, another; when resources are limited, an item may be decisive. The Wiki explains the categories without turning the game into a table of correct answers.

Content

18+ cards, stream-safe mode, and surprises

Some Bunker cards are intended for adult players, so the page includes a clear 18+ content notice. The public Wiki should not reveal every sharp card because part of the game comes from unexpected turns and group reactions.

For streams or mixed groups, a safer content mode is useful. Educational examples show the format of cards and mechanics, while the full catalog can stay hidden until the match. That keeps preparation helpful without removing surprise.

Glossary

Terms to know before starting

Candidate means an active player competing for a place in the bunker. Capacity means how many people the shelter can accept after the disaster. A special condition is a card or effect that changes traits, voting, or final survival chances.

The host controls room start, settings, and important phases. Active players keep fighting for a seat, while eliminated players can still shape the atmosphere through discussion if the group agrees. The finale shows the consequences of the group’s choices.

FAQ

FAQ

Who starts voting?

The host starts voting. Even in the final round, it runs as a normal phase if the room needs a decision.

Do I need to read the Wiki before my first game?

Not required, but the Wiki helps new players understand phases, card categories, and voting logic faster.

Why are not all cards shown?

A full list would spoil the surprises. The public page explains mechanics and shows examples while leaving part of the content for live play.