Compare The Jackbox Party Pack 11 prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Jackbox Games, Inc.. Published by Jackbox Games, Inc.. Released on 10/22/2025. Available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie, RPG, Simulation, Strategy.

Five all-new games, one host device, zero extra controllers needed, and a 92% positive Steam rating that suggests Jackbox still knows how to wreck a game night in the best way possible.

I'll admit my instinct when reviewing a party pack is to cross-reference each mini-game against a decision tree: voting mechanic, player count floor, online viability, repeat-session decay. Pack 11 holds up well on most of those axes, but it earns its stripes by doing something tactically smart: every single one of its five games is a new IP, with no sequel padding. The writing game is Doominate, and structurally it plays closest to the Quiplash lineage. Players get a wholesome prompt and race to append the most catastrophic possible continuation, then vote head-to-head on the ruins. Round one has you wrecking other people's prompts; round two flips it, letting you submit favorite things before your friends dismantle them; round three asks you to salvage something already broken, which reviewers broadly agree is the weakest segment. At full eight-player capacity the voting rounds start to drag, so mid-size groups of four to six get the tightest experience. Hear Say swaps typing for your phone's microphone, asking players to conjure sound effects and then watching those noises get edited into short video clips. It is genuinely funny when conditions are right, but Hear Say is the pack's most context-sensitive game: in-person groups should record one at a time or the audio chaos becomes unscored chaos. Cookie Haus is the mandatory drawing game, here repackaged as cookie decoration with frosting, sprinkles, and customer prompts. The tactile novelty is real but the structure underneath is thin, and phone-screen icing physics produce inconsistent results. Expect it to generate laughs on novelty early in the evening, then get rotated out. The two games that justify the purchase at any group size are Suspectives and Legends of Trivia. Suspectives is a social deduction game where players first answer a bank of personal survey questions, then use those answers as evidence during structured interrogation, lie-detector, and accusation phases to identify the hidden criminal. It owes a conceptual debt to Fakin' It and Among Us, but the survey-as-evidence mechanics give it genuine investigative teeth. The catch is that it needs at least four players and works best with people who actually know each other. Body language reads are a real variable, and a group of online strangers will have a flatter time than a living room full of friends who know who always lies about their food preferences. Legends of Trivia is the one that surprised me most. Players pick RPG classes with distinct attack, health, and gold stats, then cooperate to fight monsters by answering trivia correctly. Correct answers deal damage; wrong answers let enemies hit back. The group can split answers under uncertainty, spend gold on items at shops, and choose branching paths between boss encounters. That strategic layer, choosing paths, managing item economy, deciding when to gamble a split answer, gives it more decision depth than any trivia game has a right to have. One reviewer called it easily the best trivia game in ages, and that tracks. The main gripe is that it is purely cooperative, with no competitive mode, and pacing can slip when enemy HP runs long. Accessibility is solid across the board. One person owns the game; everyone else joins via jackbox.tv on any phone or tablet. No extra hardware, no app install. The profanity filter exists but has gaps, so a family-mode warning is warranted for younger rooms. Steam user reviews sit at 92% positive across nearly 400 ratings, which puts this comfortably among the stronger packs in the series. For existing Jackbox owners the three voting-format games (Doominate, Hear Say, Cookie Haus) will feel familiar in structure even if the themes are fresh. If trivia and social deduction are the genres your group gravitates toward, the Legends of Trivia and Suspectives pairing alone makes this a smart rotation addition. Diego, Scout Team

The Jackbox Party Pack 11
AdventureCasualIndieRPGSimulationStrategy

The Jackbox Party Pack 11

Oct 22, 2025Jackbox Games, Inc.
GamerScout Says

Five all-new games, one host device, zero extra controllers needed, and a 92% positive Steam rating that suggests Jackbox still knows how to wreck a game night in the best way possible.

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About The Jackbox Party Pack 11

I'll admit my instinct when reviewing a party pack is to cross-reference each mini-game against a decision tree: voting mechanic, player count floor, online viability, repeat-session decay. Pack 11 holds up well on most of those axes, but it earns its stripes by doing something tactically smart: every single one of its five games is a new IP, with no sequel padding. The writing game is Doominate, and structurally it plays closest to the Quiplash lineage. Players get a wholesome prompt and race to append the most catastrophic possible continuation, then vote head-to-head on the ruins. Round one has you wrecking other people's prompts; round two flips it, letting you submit favorite things before your friends dismantle them; round three asks you to salvage something already broken, which reviewers broadly agree is the weakest segment. At full eight-player capacity the voting rounds start to drag, so mid-size groups of four to six get the tightest experience. Hear Say swaps typing for your phone's microphone, asking players to conjure sound effects and then watching those noises get edited into short video clips. It is genuinely funny when conditions are right, but Hear Say is the pack's most context-sensitive game: in-person groups should record one at a time or the audio chaos becomes unscored chaos. Cookie Haus is the mandatory drawing game, here repackaged as cookie decoration with frosting, sprinkles, and customer prompts. The tactile novelty is real but the structure underneath is thin, and phone-screen icing physics produce inconsistent results. Expect it to generate laughs on novelty early in the evening, then get rotated out. The two games that justify the purchase at any group size are Suspectives and Legends of Trivia. Suspectives is a social deduction game where players first answer a bank of personal survey questions, then use those answers as evidence during structured interrogation, lie-detector, and accusation phases to identify the hidden criminal. It owes a conceptual debt to Fakin' It and Among Us, but the survey-as-evidence mechanics give it genuine investigative teeth. The catch is that it needs at least four players and works best with people who actually know each other. Body language reads are a real variable, and a group of online strangers will have a flatter time than a living room full of friends who know who always lies about their food preferences. Legends of Trivia is the one that surprised me most. Players pick RPG classes with distinct attack, health, and gold stats, then cooperate to fight monsters by answering trivia correctly. Correct answers deal damage; wrong answers let enemies hit back. The group can split answers under uncertainty, spend gold on items at shops, and choose branching paths between boss encounters. That strategic layer, choosing paths, managing item economy, deciding when to gamble a split answer, gives it more decision depth than any trivia game has a right to have. One reviewer called it easily the best trivia game in ages, and that tracks. The main gripe is that it is purely cooperative, with no competitive mode, and pacing can slip when enemy HP runs long. Accessibility is solid across the board. One person owns the game; everyone else joins via jackbox.tv on any phone or tablet. No extra hardware, no app install. The profanity filter exists but has gaps, so a family-mode warning is warranted for younger rooms. Steam user reviews sit at 92% positive across nearly 400 ratings, which puts this comfortably among the stronger packs in the series. For existing Jackbox owners the three voting-format games (Doominate, Hear Say, Cookie Haus) will feel familiar in structure even if the themes are fresh. If trivia and social deduction are the genres your group gravitates toward, the Legends of Trivia and Suspectives pairing alone makes this a smart rotation addition. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

multiplayerpvponline-pvplocal-multiplayercooponline-cooplocal-coopachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:aaaSocial DeductionRPG TriviaCooperative PartyMicrophone RequiredPhone-as-ControllerVoting MechanicWhodunnitWord PromptDrawing GameGroup Size Dependent

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Verified

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10+
Memory
4 GB RAM
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce 500+ / Radeon 5000+ or Greater
Processor
2.66 Ghz Core 2 Duo or Greater

Recommended

OS
Windows 10+
Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce 600+ / Radeon 6000+
Processor
2.33 GHz Quad Core or Greater

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Game Info

Developer
Jackbox Games, Inc.
Publisher
Jackbox Games, Inc.
Release Date
Oct 22, 2025

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What platforms is The Jackbox Party Pack 11 available on?

The Jackbox Party Pack 11 is available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox.

When was The Jackbox Party Pack 11 released?

The Jackbox Party Pack 11 was released on 22 October 2025.

Who developed The Jackbox Party Pack 11?

The Jackbox Party Pack 11 was developed by Jackbox Games, Inc..