Compare Are You Smarter Than A 5th Grader prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Massive Miniteam. Published by www.handy-games.com GmbH. Released on 8/23/2022. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Casual.

Packed with over 6,800 questions across 24 subjects, this couch trivia game has a genuinely good time hiding inside it - but you'll have to wrestle past sluggish pacing and a solo mode that feels like detention to find it.

My first impression sitting down with this one solo was pure, optimistic nostalgia - a licensed TV quiz game, colorful classroom set, animated kids ready to help me look smart. Twenty minutes in, I was hammering the skip button through host animations and wondering if the show itself ever felt this slow. That is the central tension here, and it never fully resolves. The structure is faithful to the TV format. Questions scale from first-grade to fifth-grade difficulty across 24 subjects - math, vocabulary, animal sciences, spelling, and more - delivered via multiple-choice, true-or-false, and minigame formats. Three lifelines are available per run: copy a classmate's answer, poll the whole class, or swap out the question entirely. Each student has subject-specific strengths, so picking the right one to copy is the only real moment of low-key strategy the game offers. Correct answers accumulate points toward a "Permanent Record" system that unlocks cosmetics like desk skins and bobbleheads, plus new classmates and additional question subjects. The problem is that some of those question categories are locked behind grind progress from the start, which is a strange design choice when the game's main selling point is its question volume. Pacing is the game's biggest obstacle. Everything is fully voiced - every question, every answer, every bit of commentary from the cast of fictional kids and two original hosts named Theodore and Claudia. The sheer scope of that voice work is genuinely impressive, but the execution is uneven, and the breaks between segments cause sessions to drag well past the point of comfort. A single solo run can clock in around 30 minutes but feel considerably longer. There is a skip button, though certain "suspenseful" sections cannot be skipped at all, and players coming in expecting something snappy along the lines of Jackbox will leave disappointed. The absence of any online multiplayer is also a real gap - local-only in 2022, for up to eight players, limits who can actually get the best out of this. When you do have people in the room, the experience improves noticeably. Multiple players can share a single controller, which is a practical call given most households are not running eight controllers simultaneously. The competitive format works - watching someone confidently botch a third-grade geography question never gets completely old. The cartoon visual style is colorful and clean enough, even if it does not do anything technically ambitious. The option to toggle off US-culture-specific questions is a quietly excellent accessibility choice that makes the pool feel genuinely international. On PC, Steam reviews sit at a mixed 66%, and that split is honest. Solo players looking for a quick, efficient trivia fix will find the pacing frustrating. Fans of the TV show hoping to find Jeff Foxworthy or John Cena here will be let down - the fictional hosts are fine but carry none of that original charm. If you have a couch full of family or friends and no strong feelings about pace, there is a decent party game buried in here. Everyone else should probably look at Jackbox or a faster-moving trivia alternative before committing. Alex, Scout Team

Are You Smarter Than A 5th Grader
Casual

Are You Smarter Than A 5th Grader

Aug 23, 2022Massive Miniteamwww.handy-games.com GmbH
GamerScout Says

Packed with over 6,800 questions across 24 subjects, this couch trivia game has a genuinely good time hiding inside it - but you'll have to wrestle past sluggish pacing and a solo mode that feels like detention to find it.

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About Are You Smarter Than A 5th Grader

My first impression sitting down with this one solo was pure, optimistic nostalgia - a licensed TV quiz game, colorful classroom set, animated kids ready to help me look smart. Twenty minutes in, I was hammering the skip button through host animations and wondering if the show itself ever felt this slow. That is the central tension here, and it never fully resolves. The structure is faithful to the TV format. Questions scale from first-grade to fifth-grade difficulty across 24 subjects - math, vocabulary, animal sciences, spelling, and more - delivered via multiple-choice, true-or-false, and minigame formats. Three lifelines are available per run: copy a classmate's answer, poll the whole class, or swap out the question entirely. Each student has subject-specific strengths, so picking the right one to copy is the only real moment of low-key strategy the game offers. Correct answers accumulate points toward a "Permanent Record" system that unlocks cosmetics like desk skins and bobbleheads, plus new classmates and additional question subjects. The problem is that some of those question categories are locked behind grind progress from the start, which is a strange design choice when the game's main selling point is its question volume. Pacing is the game's biggest obstacle. Everything is fully voiced - every question, every answer, every bit of commentary from the cast of fictional kids and two original hosts named Theodore and Claudia. The sheer scope of that voice work is genuinely impressive, but the execution is uneven, and the breaks between segments cause sessions to drag well past the point of comfort. A single solo run can clock in around 30 minutes but feel considerably longer. There is a skip button, though certain "suspenseful" sections cannot be skipped at all, and players coming in expecting something snappy along the lines of Jackbox will leave disappointed. The absence of any online multiplayer is also a real gap - local-only in 2022, for up to eight players, limits who can actually get the best out of this. When you do have people in the room, the experience improves noticeably. Multiple players can share a single controller, which is a practical call given most households are not running eight controllers simultaneously. The competitive format works - watching someone confidently botch a third-grade geography question never gets completely old. The cartoon visual style is colorful and clean enough, even if it does not do anything technically ambitious. The option to toggle off US-culture-specific questions is a quietly excellent accessibility choice that makes the pool feel genuinely international. On PC, Steam reviews sit at a mixed 66%, and that split is honest. Solo players looking for a quick, efficient trivia fix will find the pacing frustrating. Fans of the TV show hoping to find Jeff Foxworthy or John Cena here will be let down - the fictional hosts are fine but carry none of that original charm. If you have a couch full of family or friends and no strong feelings about pace, there is a decent party game buried in here. Everyone else should probably look at Jackbox or a faster-moving trivia alternative before committing. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamCouch Co-opTV LicenseQuiz ShowLifeline MechanicsUnlockable QuestionsGrade-School TriviaUp to 8 PlayersController Sharing

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
66%(167)

Game Info

Developer
Massive Miniteam
Publisher
www.handy-games.com GmbH
Release Date
Aug 23, 2022

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