The Jackbox Party Pack
Five party games in one pack, controlled entirely from your phone. No controllers needed, just people willing to look silly.
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About The Jackbox Party Pack
The Jackbox Party Pack is a collection of five party games designed to run on one screen while every player uses a smartphone or tablet as their controller. No gamepads, no shared keyboards, no wrestling over who gets the good seat. One person owns the game on PC, streams it to a TV or shares their screen, and up to a hundred participants join via a browser. That accessibility curve is basically flat, which matters a lot when half your group hasn't touched a game since Guitar Hero. The five games span trivia, drawing, and bluffing formats. You Don't Know Jack 2015 is the flagship, a fast-paced quiz show with a sharp, sarcastic host voice and questions that punish button-mashing through "dis or dat" rounds and screwing mechanics that let you redirect wrong answers to opponents. Lie Swatter is a quick true-false trivia warm-up, fine but shallow. Word Spud is a word-chaining filler game that lives or dies on the group. Drawful is arguably the pack's real standout: players draw absurd prompts on their phones, then everyone else guesses what the drawing is supposed to be, and points come from fooling people into voting for your fake answer. It rewards creativity and punishes nobody for bad art. Fibbage XL rounds things out as a bluffing game where you invent fake trivia answers to fool the room, a format that scales beautifully because funnier lies beat smarter ones. From a design-depth standpoint, this is not the pack I would recommend to someone hunting for mechanical complexity. The strategy layer is thin: Fibbage rewards reading your specific group's humor, and You Don't Know Jack has some timing gamesmanship, but there are no build orders here. What the pack does exceptionally well is social engineering. The scoring systems in Drawful and Fibbage are deliberately built to create moments where someone reads a terrible lie out loud and the room collapses. That is the product. If you are hosting a game night with people who do not self-identify as gamers, this is one of the most reliable tools in existence for getting everyone involved inside five minutes. Where it falls short: the game count is modest by later Jackbox standards, and Word Spud in particular feels like it shipped to hit a number. The You Don't Know Jack content is locked to its release year, so topical jokes have dated in places. Streaming support works, but input lag on a bad connection noticeably hurts the buzzer timing in YDKJ rounds. There is no offline single-player mode worth mentioning, which is by design but worth stating clearly. This is a social tool, not a solo experience. If you are evaluating the Jackbox series as an entry point, this original pack holds up primarily on the strength of Drawful and Fibbage XL. Later packs expanded both concepts significantly, but the core loop is intact here and the price point across the whole series means this remains a reasonable starting spot, especially if you want the original YDKJ flavor. Mod support is nonexistent by design, and the AI for solo play is absent rather than bad. Treat it as party infrastructure, not a game you sit down with alone. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Jackbox Games, Inc.
- Publisher
- Jackbox Games, Inc.
- Release Date
- Nov 26, 2014
