

As you might expect, there are plenty of surprises undoubtedly in store for players, and hopefully this title's host is as good as Paul Ruebens was in 2001.ĭelightful insert of marketing materials here: The new game uses phones (and web-enabled devices) to allow up to eight people to compete at the same time. It’s a big scenery change that’s led us to update the game in really fun ways, and given us a ton of new stuff to make fun of. This version sees the game (and Cookie) acquired by the friendly corporate overlords at Binjpipe, your premiere media bingeing streaming service. We wanted to wait until we had a fresh take on the classic formula.

We didn’t want to do another YDKJ just because we could. The team also found a new way to re-structure the meta-narrative of this Jack game, in a playfully modern twist: YDKJ (final title pending) will be one of five different games included in the package. Google is failing me on this, but if you can find those questions anywhere please send 'em my way.Īnyhow, at PAX there was an announcement from Jackbox Games that a Jackbox Party Pack 5 will be coming out Fall of 2018 to PC, consoles, and other major platforms. The games have been packaged and repackaged and ported into hundreds of forms over the years, including a series of books and (what the) a series of questions created just for the candidates in America's 2000 Presidential Election? The questions were apparently sent to a group of radio stations, in hopes the hosts would get Bush or Gore to play along. You Don't Know Jack is a weird cult of personality experience that, despite its many forms over the years, manages to bridge both genuine quiz show gameplay with ever-increasing antics. It's not that HQ Trivia is inherently bad: it's just that dude's face. You Don't Know Jack brings its trademark multiple-choice questions and otherworldly categories to a year that desperately needs a reason to stop playing HQ Trivia. The world's favorite (most antagonist) party quiz game is making a return.
