
(It's still a good question that I hope gets brought up during the development of these games.

Making a trivia game that truly allowed for everyone to engage with it on the same level and still present challenge would likely be very challenging. And you might say it about pop culture icons. On the other, sports trivia should probably just get tossed out entirely because even within a culture, it's likely going to be specific to fans of said sport on top of everything else.īut you might say the same of political questions about an individual country.

Or if you bring up Turkish history rather than US/UK history, you're once again going to be picking a different cultural knowledge pool. Trivia Murder Party is one of the games featured in The Jackbox Party Pack 3.

If you swap the football questions with rugby questions, you're just trading one cultural background for another. Trivia Murder Party Jackbox Games Wiki Fandom. The first trivia murder party was phenomenal. On one hand, I don't blame them for the US-centric questions - knowledge on specific topics is very often going to come from a certain time, place, and cultural context. I bring my jackbox into my grade 6 classroom once a month when I can relate it to what we are doing- guesspionage is great for understanding percentages, mad verse city is great for poetry h it’s, etc But sometimes we just have to have some dumb fun and just watch people fight on the killing floor.
