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Docs Sharing With Grandparents & Remote Family

Sharing With Grandparents & Remote Family

How to send your finished comic to anyone — no account needed to view it.

5 min read

One of the best things about Three Word Tale is what happens after the game ends.

Every completed game generates a comic strip — your words, your drawings, your story. And every comic lives at a permanent link that you can share with anyone.

Finding Your Comic

After the game ends, go to My Comics (accessible from the main menu). You’ll see all the comics from games you’ve played, most recent first.

Each comic shows the players who contributed and the story you made together.

How to Share

  1. Open the comic you want to share.
  2. Tap or click Share.
  3. Copy the link.

That’s the permanent URL for your comic. Anyone with that link can view it.

What the Recipient Sees

The person you send it to doesn’t need an account. They don’t need to download anything. They open the link in any browser — on a phone, tablet, or computer — and they see your comic.

They’ll see:

  • The full comic strip with all panels in order
  • The words each player contributed
  • The drawings, including any photographed paper drawings

They can’t edit it or play from the link. It’s just for viewing.

Works on Mobile

Grandparents opening the link on their phone will see the comic exactly as it’s meant to look. The comic page is designed to work on all screen sizes. No pinching or zooming required.

The link won’t expire. You can send it today, send it again in a year, or bookmark it and come back to it in five years. The comic will still be there.

This makes Three Word Tale comics worth sharing properly — not just a screenshot that lives on one device, but something with an address that’s yours to keep.

Suggested Ways to Share

  • Family group chat: Paste the link after game night. Everyone who was there can revisit it.
  • Email to grandparents: A sentence and a link. “We made this together last night. Here’s what the story was.”
  • Save the link somewhere: Add it to a note or a shared album. Ten comics from ten game nights is a real collection.
  • Print it: From the comic page on a desktop browser, you can screenshot and print. Good for the fridge or a classroom wall.

Playing With Remote Family

If you haven’t played with someone who isn’t in the same room yet — it works exactly the same way.

The host creates a room and shares the four-letter code. Remote players join from wherever they are. The game runs in real time; everyone sees the story grow together. When it’s done, everyone gets the same comic.

It’s the kitchen-table game, but the table extends as far as you need it to.

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