What if the word passed out was Face or Fame or another word that's only one letter away from fake. Then everyone who got a real card would have a moment of shock and they'd have to talk that out discreetly xD
Oh, this game reminds me of the game that I learned from a Chinese friend in grad school. He didn't know what the game would be called in English, so I have no name for it. But it was like this, except instead of drawing a line, you say a sentence about the thing on your paper. One person has a different word from everybody else on their paper but has to blend in. And because everyone has a word on their paper, nobody knows if they're the faker to start with. It's very fun, as long as whoever writes out the words doesn't pick completely dissimilar things to write.
1) i kept thinking "i miss jeff!" bc i put on the polygon plays jackbox videos lately for background noise. yay! hi, jeff! 2) simone and jenna kill it every video with their fashions. jenna gives off the chaotic neutral of outfits vibe and simone looks like the pta mom who is about to kick another mom's ass into the sun. 3) brian and pat look great as always but thats not shocking. 4) HI KAREN ITS GREAT TO SEE A NEW FACE!!! hope you enjoy polygon! congrats on your new job! we're rooting for you! finally, simone referencing ancient greek claywork is such a damn mood.
Ok but I'm disappointed at the lack of creativity on the Waluigi one. If I was up there, I would've drawn a ddr mat and a tennis racket. Such easy concepts that don't even remotely give it away unless they already know.
A super fun thing to do in this game is in final round just give everyone a "fake" card and watch as they all exclaim "-yeeeees! I get it!" "-Oh you get it?! Yeeeeees!".
just gotta say thank you so much to whoever on the polygon team makes the captions. as someone with an auditory processing disorder, it makes enjoying these videos so much easier :D
Roman Hauksson-Neill In fairness, someone who needs captions might not have ever heard that theme, thus being unable to mentally conjure it from a memory they don’t have. Hearing ‘sad trombone music’, even if they don’t know what a trombone sounds like, tells them the mood of the music and thus the context of the intended comedy.
@@UltimateKyuubiFox Also, as someone who's from Europe, I just had to google what Curb Your Enthusiasm is, but I understood the comedic intention of the music perfectly fine.
To be honest, in another iteration of Werewolf, I managed to do the same thing. At the end of a very intense game, four (of I think 16) people were left standing, only one of them a werewolf, but nobody was aware that the werewolf had a partner. That - was me. I was also the seer. In this iteration, you could be elected mayor, so in case of a draw the mayors vote was worth more than that of any other person. I had set everything up from the beginning of the game. I had signalled my partner which people to kill as a werewolf, I had my own little hive of people I had managed to inform that I was the seer, so they would protect me in the daytime (until I systematically fed them to the wolves, that is), and it all had come down to that one vote. Earlier I had my hive set up to elect one specific mayor, a simple villager, and now I only had to convince her that her last ally was actually a werewolf, so I retraced my steps, including how I had basically elected her because I knew she was innocent, so she believed me I was the seer. The look on her face when she realised that I was partnered with the werewolf, and that she had just killed them all, was priceless, but she never trusted me again in any game ever after. Fun times.
I was seeing the amphitheaters at SeaWorld where they keep dolphins... the bottom part was the depths of the tank, on top the stage and backdrop.. she absolutely had me there...
It leads me to believe that the key to winning this game is drawing a 'reference' so obtuse everyone struggles to understand it until someone pretends/misinterprets it as valid, and then going to bat for anyone who gets accused of being fake
SPOILER FOR THE LAST GAME He drew the same thing twice because they used the same texture/model for clouds and bushes in the early Mario games, so he drew a cloud up high and a bush on the ground *mindblown*
@@Stowneyo Care to point out when Jeff says it? He says he'll explain when the round is over, and "look at the placement," shortly before, but can't seem to find him *literally* saying what OP did.
spruce bingsteen you obviously don’t know what literally means XD I for one found this explanation very helpful and I’m glad at least some people don’t gatekeep
Yes!!! They even marked it as "crying audience", and I'm like ??? No that was so perfectly subtle. It's the most subtle possibility for drawing clown makeup!
There has been a depressing lack of Polygon's resident fashion icons on RU-vid lately. Brian looks good in the suit, but it's the same suit, mainly. Thank you, Polygon.
watching overboard episodes makes me feel like i have friends lmao. your happy atmosphere penetrates our screens. so thanks for forty minutes of laughter and joy.
"I like to add an element of chaos to everything I do” is kind of the theme for everyone in this video, no? I love this series so much, and this was an awesome ep so thank you!!
The whole time when it was Pat's turn for Dolphin I was just saying to myself, "Draw a gamecube. Draw a gamecube." I looked away to fill up my drink, and then I turned back and saw a gamecube and lost my mind.
I just noticed that in round 2 Jenna said “That specific car” and how that made it less suspicious, as if she knew what the car was from/ what the prompt was.
As soon as I saw Jeff's second line on the last I knew he'd mistaken it for Mario and tried to draw a cloud and then a bush because they're the same shape in Mario Bros.