Compare YOU DON'T KNOW JACK MOVIES prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Jackbox Games, Inc.. Published by Jackbox Games, Inc.. Released on 11/5/2013. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie, Strategy.

If you can name the cinematographer of a 1950s Fred Astaire musical without Googling, this snarky 1997 trivia gauntlet will finally feel like home.

I have a spreadsheet of trivia games ranked by question depth, and YDKJ Movies sits near the top of the "punishingly specific" column. Originally released in 1997 and reissued to Steam in 2013, this is the fifth entry in the You Don't Know Jack series and the one Jackbox themselves flag as the hardest in the catalog. That reputation is earned. The question pool covers cinema from the classic Hollywood era through the mid-90s, and it does not hold your hand. Cookie Masterson, the series' reliably obnoxious host, will verbally dissect you when you get something wrong, which happens a lot. Mechanically, the game runs on the same engine as Vol. 2. You pick categories, buzz in on questions worth $1,000 to $3,000, and watch that number double in Round 2. Get one wrong and the money comes right back out of your wallet. The multiplayer wrinkle that keeps things sharp is "Screw Your Neighbor": buzz in, press the screw key, and you force an opponent to answer even if they have no idea. If they pull it off anyway, the penalty bounces back to you. It is a small but genuinely tense risk-reward decision that elevates what could be a flat Q-and-A into something more tactical. Each game closes with the Jack Attack, a rapid-fire word-association round where scores are hidden from all players, keeping the final result uncertain until the last moment. The ceiling for enjoyment here is tied almost completely to how deep your pre-1997 film knowledge runs. Questions stretch from Fred Astaire to Freddy Krueger (the game's own framing, and an accurate one), meaning you need range across both prestige cinema and schlocky horror. The writing, as always with this series, is the actual product: questions are wordsmithed so that even wrong answers feel deliberate, and the Gibberish Question format, where a nonsense phrase phonetically describes a real answer, requires a specific kind of lateral thinking that rewards repeat players. There is also a per-episode hidden wrong-answer bonus tied to a fictional sponsor, which means paying attention to the bad options is sometimes as valuable as knowing the right one. The honest downsides are real. The game renders at 640x480 maximum resolution and you will need to manually adjust your desktop to fill the screen. The question pool is fixed, so once you have cycled through the episodes, replay value drops fast. Steam user reception sits at a mixed 69% positive across 56 reviews, which tracks with the experience: fans of the series and genuine cinephiles find it rewarding, while anyone expecting modern Jackbox production values or post-2000 movie coverage will bounce off it quickly. There is no mod ecosystem, no tutorial to speak of, and no AI opponent worth worrying about. This is a local-multiplayer relic that runs best with two or three people sharing a keyboard and a sincere disagreement about whether the answer is Cary Grant or Gary Cooper. Diego, Scout Team

YOU DON'T KNOW JACK MOVIES
CasualIndieStrategy

YOU DON'T KNOW JACK MOVIES

Nov 5, 2013Jackbox Games, Inc.
GamerScout Says

If you can name the cinematographer of a 1950s Fred Astaire musical without Googling, this snarky 1997 trivia gauntlet will finally feel like home.

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About YOU DON'T KNOW JACK MOVIES

I have a spreadsheet of trivia games ranked by question depth, and YDKJ Movies sits near the top of the "punishingly specific" column. Originally released in 1997 and reissued to Steam in 2013, this is the fifth entry in the You Don't Know Jack series and the one Jackbox themselves flag as the hardest in the catalog. That reputation is earned. The question pool covers cinema from the classic Hollywood era through the mid-90s, and it does not hold your hand. Cookie Masterson, the series' reliably obnoxious host, will verbally dissect you when you get something wrong, which happens a lot. Mechanically, the game runs on the same engine as Vol. 2. You pick categories, buzz in on questions worth $1,000 to $3,000, and watch that number double in Round 2. Get one wrong and the money comes right back out of your wallet. The multiplayer wrinkle that keeps things sharp is "Screw Your Neighbor": buzz in, press the screw key, and you force an opponent to answer even if they have no idea. If they pull it off anyway, the penalty bounces back to you. It is a small but genuinely tense risk-reward decision that elevates what could be a flat Q-and-A into something more tactical. Each game closes with the Jack Attack, a rapid-fire word-association round where scores are hidden from all players, keeping the final result uncertain until the last moment. The ceiling for enjoyment here is tied almost completely to how deep your pre-1997 film knowledge runs. Questions stretch from Fred Astaire to Freddy Krueger (the game's own framing, and an accurate one), meaning you need range across both prestige cinema and schlocky horror. The writing, as always with this series, is the actual product: questions are wordsmithed so that even wrong answers feel deliberate, and the Gibberish Question format, where a nonsense phrase phonetically describes a real answer, requires a specific kind of lateral thinking that rewards repeat players. There is also a per-episode hidden wrong-answer bonus tied to a fictional sponsor, which means paying attention to the bad options is sometimes as valuable as knowing the right one. The honest downsides are real. The game renders at 640x480 maximum resolution and you will need to manually adjust your desktop to fill the screen. The question pool is fixed, so once you have cycled through the episodes, replay value drops fast. Steam user reception sits at a mixed 69% positive across 56 reviews, which tracks with the experience: fans of the series and genuine cinephiles find it rewarding, while anyone expecting modern Jackbox production values or post-2000 movie coverage will bounce off it quickly. There is no mod ecosystem, no tutorial to speak of, and no AI opponent worth worrying about. This is a local-multiplayer relic that runs best with two or three people sharing a keyboard and a sincere disagreement about whether the answer is Cary Grant or Gary Cooper. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayertier:sub-5Classic TriviaLocal MultiplayerKeyboard BuzzerFixed Episode FormatRetro 640x480Risk-Reward ScrewingSnarky HostWord Association Final RoundPre-2000 Cinema Focus

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 4 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8
Memory
128 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
675 MB available space
Processor
500 MHz processor or faster
Sound Card
16-bit sound card
Additional Notes
The game runs at 640x480 max resolution. Manually adjust your Desktop resolution if you want the game to fill the screen.

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Game Info

Developer
Jackbox Games, Inc.
Publisher
Jackbox Games, Inc.
Release Date
Nov 5, 2013

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2026-06-100.55(lowest)

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What platforms is YOU DON'T KNOW JACK MOVIES available on?

YOU DON'T KNOW JACK MOVIES is available on PC.

When was YOU DON'T KNOW JACK MOVIES released?

YOU DON'T KNOW JACK MOVIES was released on 5 November 2013.

Who developed YOU DON'T KNOW JACK MOVIES?

YOU DON'T KNOW JACK MOVIES was developed by Jackbox Games, Inc..