FNAF falls off a lot here from the previous two games. Never vibed with the story or gameplay.

Facial recognition, advanced mobility, they even let them walk around during the day! Isn't that neat. But most importantly, they're all tied into some kind of criminal database, so they can detect a predator a mile away. Heck, we should be paying them to guard you!

It's amazing that the human body can survive without the frontal lobe, y'know?

No joke - I got this game in 2009 for successfully getting through surgery as a kid. I was rewarded with a game so memorably bizarre that it's become a meme since. This game literally has a LAUGH TRACK in it and is about collecting bobbleheads and mind control. You throw pastries at enemies. There is a remote-controlled fly that you guide through air vents. Cory in the House is truly an experience, and I'm not even joking. Play this. You'll never forget it.

The first Jak and Daxter was a basic Crash Bandicoot-style platformer that, while not perfect, was an easy and quick playthrough. Jak II gets incredibly repetitive real quick. They'll give you a mission, you'll drive in a flying car thing with janky controls, then they give you another, rinse and repeat. The story is okay but not enough for me to stick around. Around the middle mark is where I decided I was wasting time. I'm sure this was great when it came out but came off as so boring to me.

The YDKJ series starts to find its footing here. The design becomes more modernized, they know where their bread is buttered with which special questions work and which don't. One of the better ones in the series.

Released side by side with YDKJ Movies as another clone of YDKJ 2. Outdated questions but still pretty fun.

If YDKJ Sports was just a repainted YDKJ 1, this is a repainted YDKJ 2. Same special questions, different design. Questions are way outdated by today's standards. Good news is the legend Cookie Masterson hosts this.

Very similar to the first YDKJ with a slightly different design and Buzz Lippman as host. Introduces the Dis or Dat special question, which has become a staple in later releases.

A repainted version of the first YDKJ game with sports-based questions. Decent.

The one that started it all. A little primitive compared to the many minigames in the following sequels (this one only has Gibberish Question and Fiber Optic Field Trip) but a staple of 90s CD-ROM games. Absolutely aged but I love the '90s vibe surrounding it.

The best of the classic YDKJ games. Combines all the past hosts into one game, creating a fun in-game narrative. There's just no beating bingo mode.

YDKJ's first collection of trivia rounds from its then-successful Netshow, which has been long lost. Unlike most classic YDKJs, you can choose your categories ahead of time (they give you a selection of 5 or 6), which is a huge plus.

YDKJ's 1998 spinoff intended for a younger market with then-trendy '90s questions and references. Incredibly outdated but that's half the charm. Features the one-time only host Bob, who has been cast into the Jackbox shadow realm ever since.

4 year old me liked this enough. Lots of fun time-killer Finding Nemo minigames.