Players vote on who they think the Faker is, and get points depending on if they guessed the Faker's identity correctly, or in the case of the Faker, blended in successfully for as long as possible. One person, the Faker, is not given the task and has to try and blend in. Players are given a task on their phones to do in the room, such as raise their hand, hold up a number of fingers, point to another player, or make a face. ![]() Unique in that after the game ends, players are given the option to actually purchase the shirts they created during the game. ![]() Players vote for which shirts are the funniest. Then, they get a random selection of drawings and slogans and are asked to put them together into a t-shirt. Players draw designs for t-shirts, then come up with slogans. A game with a bit of an Animesque Wuxai vibe. The other players then guess whether the real answer was higher or lower. Essentially the front game from Card Sharks, in which players guess what percentage of a survey (or the audience, if the audience is big enough) answered a question in a certain way. Dead players can still play and even win during the final round. Answering a question wrong will force players to play a minigame on the "Killing Floor" to stay alive. Players are trapped by a trivia-obsessed murderer and are forced to play a Deadly Game. Also included is the ability to use a Safety Quip if you cannot think of an answer, at the cost of getting half the points you'd normally get. Introduces the ability to create questions. Verdict: Unless you really love drawing games, you'll probably be skipping this one to play two rounds of something else. If you have more people than you can have players they'll be waiting for quite some time before they can participate. It takes the longest to complete a game and the setup needed to get to the actual game part takes time. If you're a fan of Drawful you'll appreciate Tee K.O. Then the options are pitted against each other in a gauntlet until one t-shirt survives. Then each player takes a random selection of images and slogans and combines them together into whatever they think would make the best t-shirt. It has players draw several different images, then come up with random slogans and phrases, as might appear on a t-shirt. If you've played previous Jackbox Games you may have noticed that there have been no drawing games on offer, as the recently released Drawful 2 is not part of this collection. Verdict: There's nothing wrong with Guesspionage, There just isn't anything particularly catchy about it either.įinally, we have Tee K.O. There's comedy in the delivery, but that's about all. We'd love to see how people answered ridiculous questions as well as serious ones. Jackbox trademark humor is also missing from most of the questions. If you get a tough question and have no idea where the percentage lies, one bad answer will pretty much kill the game for you. Guesspionage isn't a bad game, but it might be the least played at a regular game night. The player who started the round gets points based on how close they get to the actual number, everybody else gets points based on whether they were right about where the real answer fell. Everybody else has to figure out if the actual number is higher or lower. ![]() One player tries to guess what percentage of people answered a question a certain way. ![]() Guesspionage pits up to eight players in a game of trying to figure how people answered internet surveys. Where are my statistics nerds at? No? Nobody? Oh well.
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