The Jackbox Party Pack 7
Five party games in one pack, phones as controllers, zero setup friction, and a crowd-pleasing hit rate that holds up across repeat play sessions.
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About The Jackbox Party Pack 7
The Jackbox Party Pack 7 is a local-and-remote party game collection that runs on one PC while everyone else joins from their phone or tablet via a browser. No controllers to distribute, no accounts to create for guests, you share a room code and you're in. The five included games cover a decent range of comedic styles, from rapid-fire prompt battles to drawing chaos to improvisational speech, which means a group of six can cycle through formats without the whole evening feeling like one long bit. The headliner is Quiplash 3, the third iteration of the series' flagship prompt-versus-prompt format where players write the funniest answer to an absurd question and the audience votes on a winner. If your group has played previous Quiplash entries, the mechanical loop is identical, so the freshness depends entirely on the new prompt library. It delivers. The Devils and the Details is the pack's most mechanically interesting addition: a cooperative household-task game where players secretly work against each other as devil-family members trying to sabotage the group. It rewards attention to what other players are doing, which is rare in this genre. Champ'd Up is a drawing game where submitted characters fight each other in bracket-style elimination, the sketching tools are deliberately crude, which levels the playing field between artists and non-artists. Talking Points drops a player into an improvised presentation about a topic they've never seen before while a second player controls the slides in real time, and it is consistently the room's loudest game. Blather 'Round is a clue-giving game built around deliberately vague, constrained descriptions, and it is the weakest entry, it stalls with smaller groups and the pacing can kill momentum if you drop it in the wrong slot of an evening. From a systems perspective, the audience feature is the pack's most underused selling point. Up to 10,000 additional players can join as audience members on Twitch or in person, voting on rounds and influencing outcomes without being in the active player pool. For streamers or anyone running a large event, that ceiling is practically unlimited. The content moderation tools also give a host the ability to filter prompts by family-friendliness, which matters for mixed-age gatherings. The AI quality in single-player mode is predictably thin, these games need human unpredictability to work, so solo play is mostly for familiarising yourself with the format before guests arrive. Where the pack earns its strong review score is in low barrier-to-entry execution. The onboarding for each game is handled through the game itself, with instructions displayed on players' phones before each round. A newcomer who has never touched a Jackbox title can be competitive in Quiplash within two minutes. The mod ecosystem here is not the point, this is not a game you customise with community content in the Paradox sense, though user-generated question packs exist for some titles via third-party tools. What you get is a tightly packaged, tested product with minimal friction between arrival and laughing. If you already own Packs 1 through 6, the value calculation comes down to whether Quiplash 3 and Devils and the Details are worth the entry price on their own. They are. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Jackbox Games, Inc.
- Publisher
- Jackbox Games, Inc.
- Release Date
- Oct 14, 2020