Compare YOU DON'T KNOW JACK Vol. 2 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.

A mid-90s party trivia classic that still lands its jokes -- if you can get three humans in the same room and forgive a 640x480 resolution cap.

I have spent more time than I care to admit cross-referencing spreadsheets and patch notes, so a trivia game that runs at a fixed resolution and has no mod ecosystem should fall well outside my comfort zone. And yet here I am, genuinely recommending YOU DON'T KNOW JACK Vol. 2 to anyone who can rustle up two other people and a keyboard. The core loop is tight in the way only a game designed around a single sharp idea can be: pick a category, buzz in before your opponents, answer fast, and watch your virtual cash pile grow -- or collapse -- depending on whether you were right. Questions are tiered at $1,000, $2,000, and $3,000 in Round 1, with all values doubled in Round 2, which means a confident wrong answer late in a session is genuinely punishing. That financial stakes structure is a smarter decision tree than it sounds. The question variety is where Vol. 2 earns its keep over its predecessor. The sequel adds several new question types that the base game lacked. Dis Or Dat -- where players rapidly classify a stream of words into two categories -- went on to become a franchise mainstay for good reason: it rewards breadth of knowledge and quick pattern recognition over rote memorization. Celebrity Collect Calls drop in surreal audio clips, and Picture Questions break up the otherwise audio-heavy pacing. The Jack Attack finale, where you match flying names against a central clue, is exactly as chaotic and satisfying as it sounds, and it consistently overturns comfortable leads at the last second. Host Buzz Lippman (his only full hosting appearance in the series) keeps the patter sharp, and the writing sits comfortably in that zone of pop-culture-meets-absurdism that the YDKJ franchise mastered in the 1990s. The competitive mechanics carry real depth even for two-player sessions. The Screw Your Neighbor feature lets you force an opponent to answer a question they would rather skip -- but if they get it right, you lose the money instead. That single risk-reward toggle creates more meaningful in-session decisions than most modern party games manage across their entire rulesets. Solo play exists, but it is a dry run at best. This game is fundamentally a local multiplayer experience, and the question pool of around 800 items means repeat exposure will start showing cracks after a few extended sessions with the same group. The technical reality needs a plain statement: this is a 1996 game re-released to Steam in 2013. It runs at 640x480 maximum resolution. You will need to manually adjust your desktop resolution if you want it to fill the screen. There is no mod support, no DLC cadence, no post-launch content pipeline. The question bank is fixed and finite. For a group that burns through a 21-question long game in one sitting and comes back weekly, the content ceiling will arrive faster than you want. Think of it as a very good board game with a finite number of cards -- enjoyable in rotation, not a replacement for a living game service. For anyone who grew up with this series and wants to revisit it, or for a group looking for a cheap local trivia night option that does not require a subscription or a phone app, Vol. 2 delivers exactly what it promises. The Steam re-release is the most convenient way to run it on a modern Windows machine. Go in knowing the resolution limit, set up a short 7-question game to test the waters, and escalate from there. Diego, Scout Team

YOU DON'T KNOW JACK Vol. 2
CasualIndieStrategy

YOU DON'T KNOW JACK Vol. 2

Nov 5, 2013Jackbox Games, Inc.
GamerScout Says

A mid-90s party trivia classic that still lands its jokes -- if you can get three humans in the same room and forgive a 640x480 resolution cap.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About YOU DON'T KNOW JACK Vol. 2

I have spent more time than I care to admit cross-referencing spreadsheets and patch notes, so a trivia game that runs at a fixed resolution and has no mod ecosystem should fall well outside my comfort zone. And yet here I am, genuinely recommending YOU DON'T KNOW JACK Vol. 2 to anyone who can rustle up two other people and a keyboard. The core loop is tight in the way only a game designed around a single sharp idea can be: pick a category, buzz in before your opponents, answer fast, and watch your virtual cash pile grow -- or collapse -- depending on whether you were right. Questions are tiered at $1,000, $2,000, and $3,000 in Round 1, with all values doubled in Round 2, which means a confident wrong answer late in a session is genuinely punishing. That financial stakes structure is a smarter decision tree than it sounds. The question variety is where Vol. 2 earns its keep over its predecessor. The sequel adds several new question types that the base game lacked. Dis Or Dat -- where players rapidly classify a stream of words into two categories -- went on to become a franchise mainstay for good reason: it rewards breadth of knowledge and quick pattern recognition over rote memorization. Celebrity Collect Calls drop in surreal audio clips, and Picture Questions break up the otherwise audio-heavy pacing. The Jack Attack finale, where you match flying names against a central clue, is exactly as chaotic and satisfying as it sounds, and it consistently overturns comfortable leads at the last second. Host Buzz Lippman (his only full hosting appearance in the series) keeps the patter sharp, and the writing sits comfortably in that zone of pop-culture-meets-absurdism that the YDKJ franchise mastered in the 1990s. The competitive mechanics carry real depth even for two-player sessions. The Screw Your Neighbor feature lets you force an opponent to answer a question they would rather skip -- but if they get it right, you lose the money instead. That single risk-reward toggle creates more meaningful in-session decisions than most modern party games manage across their entire rulesets. Solo play exists, but it is a dry run at best. This game is fundamentally a local multiplayer experience, and the question pool of around 800 items means repeat exposure will start showing cracks after a few extended sessions with the same group. The technical reality needs a plain statement: this is a 1996 game re-released to Steam in 2013. It runs at 640x480 maximum resolution. You will need to manually adjust your desktop resolution if you want it to fill the screen. There is no mod support, no DLC cadence, no post-launch content pipeline. The question bank is fixed and finite. For a group that burns through a 21-question long game in one sitting and comes back weekly, the content ceiling will arrive faster than you want. Think of it as a very good board game with a finite number of cards -- enjoyable in rotation, not a replacement for a living game service. For anyone who grew up with this series and wants to revisit it, or for a group looking for a cheap local trivia night option that does not require a subscription or a phone app, Vol. 2 delivers exactly what it promises. The Steam re-release is the most convenient way to run it on a modern Windows machine. Go in knowing the resolution limit, set up a short 7-question game to test the waters, and escalate from there. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayertier:sub-5Local MultiplayerParty TriviaBuzz-In GameplayDis Or DatJack AttackScore Reversal Mechanics90s ClassicRetro PC

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Gold

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 6 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8
Memory
128 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
655 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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2026-06-100.79(lowest)

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YOU DON'T KNOW JACK Vol. 2 is available on PC.

When was YOU DON'T KNOW JACK Vol. 2 released?

YOU DON'T KNOW JACK Vol. 2 was released on 5 November 2013.

Who developed YOU DON'T KNOW JACK Vol. 2?

YOU DON'T KNOW JACK Vol. 2 was developed by Jackbox Games, Inc..