Played quite a few more new (to us) Jackbox games with my friend group since the last time I posted about it, so I'll cover them by the pack numbers. Only one person has to buy them for your whole friend group to play together, so they're all pretty accessible.
Pack 1:
-You Don't Know Jack 2015 is still kinda hard to play over a stream, but it's at least funny in its setups more often than not.
-Fibbage is done better in later packs. When the questions are similar, presentation is everything.
-Drawful's a lot of fun in every variation, and this one still has some advantages to it, but probably not enough to make the pack worth buying.
Overall evaulation: Probably not worth it at full price, but there's some good times to be had.
Pack 4:
-Fibbage 3 is the one that's done better.
-Survive the Internet is hilarious and potentially a pack-seller. If you ever played an 'edit your question' game on a forum with a longer edit window than Escapist V2, you'll probably have a good time here.
Overall evaluation: It's early to say, but I think I picked a winner even with just those two.
Pack 5:
-You Don't Know Jack: Full Stream is much easier to play than 2015, but losing the 'episode' format comes with some downsides, but mostly positives. A good time if you're good enough at trivia to figure out what the questions are actually asking.
-Mad Verse City is great if your friends are creative enough to get their lines ready, because the game is not shy about blatantly ruining your verse if you don't hit submit in time. But hey, even a face-fault can be funny if you put enough effort into it.
-Patently Stupid is very funny as long as your friends are at least decent at stand-up; without that aspect, it loses a lot of value.
Overall evaluation: Depends on your friends, but it's worth a shot.
Pack 6:
-Trivia Murder Party 2 is one of the best games Jackbox has ever made. Good question difficulty, the minigames are pretty fun, it's not so punishing that non-trivia players can't pull out a win, and the tropey horror parody setting ties the whole package together neatly.
-Joke Boat is another one where you have to do stand-up, so it depends how well your friends can tell a joke. Or come up with one on the spot. Less room for face-faults than MVC, so a bit more niche.
-Dictionarium is pretty breezy fun; there isn't a lot of 'meat' to it, but it's a good palate-cleanser between rounds of other games.
-Push the Button is my least favorite of what I've played; while there's probably some pretty deep strategy to it, the process of figuring it out is one that I just don't have any fun whatsoever with. Even one screw-up can leave people side-eyeing you for no reason, leaving the aliens to run away with a free win. But hey, that's just my opinion - and by that I mean that every other person I've asked, including my other friends, loves it.
Overall evaluation: TMP2 is worth it at full price. Everything else is cream on top. Except Push the Button. For fuck's sake, don't say I'm sus just because I said I don't like PTB.
Pack 7:
-Quiplash 3 is probably the most 'freeform' writing game, which makes it both easier and harder to make funny statements happen. Love the claymation aesthetic and Schmitty as the host, though.
-Talking Points is a presentation game. Can your friends hack it? If so, great. If not, might be a skip.
-Blather Round is fun enough, like Dictionarium it's not especially involved so it's easy to work into a game night.
-Champ'd Up is another near-perfect title. With more in-depth drawing tools than the other drawing games and a simple-yet-brilliant setup that makes every matchup funny, this one's an instant classic.
Overall evaluation: I'd say this is the best value-for-money pack that I've played in terms of games that are a hit in my group. There may be individual games that are better, but with Champ'd Up this one's got a home-run slugger, and multiple 'slap hitters' to continue the baseball metaphor. What I'm saying is, if you only want to get one, you can do a hell of a lot worse than Pack 7.
Pack 8:
-Job Job is the most fun of the writing games I've played, with another setup that's easy to understand and easy to make funny responses out of. Also, M. Bubbles is easily a top three host.
-The Wheel of Enormous Proportions is a bit divisive. If you're not super into trivia, then the Wheel means that being the best trivia player doesn't mean you'll always win, but if you want to take it seriously then you might find that too much of the scoring doesn't come from answering questions. Anyway, I like it.
-Drawful Animate is like Drawful. That means it's good.
-Poll Mine didn't grab me. (Still better than Push the Button.)
-Weapons Drawn is another game that probably takes more than one game to figure out. I enjoyed it a lot more than PTB in the learning phase, but my group's not so into it, so we probably aren't going to play it again. Too bad.
Overall evaluation: Another 'get it for this one' pack, with Job Job being that one.