
I'm impressed with how many great social game mechanics come into play here-starting with the lighthearted team naming and escalating to strategic deduction, creative thinking, and careful application of friend knowledge. It was more of a symbolic victory born from a technical error, of course, but it was still sweet. I would've been happy with a draw, but a final massive upset (it turns out Hot Vampire was more popular than Just Kinda Hot) won us the game. The blunder gave us the opening we needed to stay in the game. You couldn't have planned a better sabotage! Team Murderer just had to choose guitar to steal our torch and take it all, but in a godlike twist of fate, their designated answer-chooser lost connection to the Jackbox website on his phone just as time ran out. It was between guitar, just hot, and "Hot Vampire (movie)". We chose the wrong door several times and were on the brink of losing, but we'd get to stay in every time team Murder messed one up after us.īy the time we'd sussed out the bottom five with answers like "Actually Talented" and "In A Pop Band", I thought our goose was cooked. Nailing down the first four proved tough. It turns out popular answers are a little more obvious than duds. Working from the bottom up didn't help either. This one really threw me for a loop because it was hard to pinpoint which friends were answering ironically (like me) and which ones were embracing their hotness. The prompt was something along the lines of "If you were a celebrity, which of these are reasons you'd be considered attractive" with answers like "Just Kinda Hot", "Hot Vampire (TV)", "Playing Guitar", and "Actually Talented". Our finale was a survey with eight answers and a new wrinkle: rank answers from least to most popular, and if you get one wrong, lose a torch.įinishing with the most torches felt like a long shot at this point-now we just wanted to survive with the one torch we had left. The Murderers had four torches and we had one.


Going into the final round, things weren't looking good for team Sex. Not only do you have to navigate around specifics, but it's very funny to watch the other team doubt themselves, misremember details, and scramble to lock in a door before the buzzer. Note: The games included in this pack are in English only.I suppose it'd be possible to impose a rule against listening in (playing over Discord, we could have muted each other between turns), but I think keeping conversations open makes Poll Mine more entertaining. No big mess of controllers needed! You’re gonna need more than one party for this.

Jackbox party tv code#
Once a game is started from the in-pack menu, players simply connect to the “” web address on their device and then enter the on-screen room code to enter a game. Players play using their phones, tablets, or even computers as controllers – making it the perfect easy-in entertainment piece for your next game night or party. For 1-100 players! Your phones or tablets are your controllers! The team behind YOU DON’T KNOW JACK presents FIVE guffaw-inducing party games in one pack! Games include:ġ) The comedy trivia sensation YOU DON’T NOW JACK 2015 (1-4 players) with hundreds of all-new questions.Ģ) The hilarious bluffing game Fibbage XL (2-8 players), with 50% more questions added to the original hit game Fibbage.ģ) The bizarre drawing game Drawful (3-8 players) - you draw right there on your phone or tablet (very little/no real skill required).Ĥ) The racy-as-you-want-to-be fill-in-the-blank word game Word Spud (2-8 players).ĥ) The wacky-fact-filled Lie Swatter (1-100 players).
