Jeopardy! has been adapted into a number of
video games released on various consoles and handhelds spanning multiple
hardware generations. Most
Jeopardy! games released prior to 1998 were published by
GameTek, which filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection that year.
Consoles An
Atari 2600 adaptation of
Jeopardy! was planned by The Great Game Co. in 1983, but that game ended up being
cancelled during development. This would have been the only video game based on the Fleming version if it were released. Then, from 1987 to 1990,
Rare developed a series of three
Jeopardy! games for the
Nintendo Entertainment System. The first features general knowledge questions, the second is a "Junior Edition" featuring easier questions and child contestants, and the third is an "Anniversary Edition" honoring the 25th anniversary of the original
Art Fleming version's debut. The
Super Jeopardy! specials were given a video game adaptation for the NES, titled
Talking Super Jeopardy! because of its periodic use of voice synthesis.
Entertainment Weekly gave the game a C. In 1992, GameTek released
Jeopardy! video games for the
Super NES and the
Genesis. These two games were followed up by "Deluxe Editions" and "Sports Editions" in 1993 and 1994 respectively. Of the "Sports Editions" in particular,
Computer Gaming World said that despite their "many flaws", they "[exude] a certain degree of charm" in emulating the positive and negative aspects of the television show. Later in 1994,
Sony Imagesoft created a game based on the show for the
Sega CD (with a subsequent PC version released in 1995), while
Philips Interactive Media released a version on
CD-i the following year, with clues being read by
Wheel of Fortune announcer
Charlie O'Donnell instead of Alex Trebek. GameTek's last
Jeopardy! video game was completed and released after its bankruptcy, being published in 1998 for the
Nintendo 64. It received negative reviews which criticized its graphics (particularly the absence of animation on the contestants) and the frequent recycling of questions. According to Gametek, the latter issue results from the fact that the game loses track of which questions have already been used every time the Nintendo 64 is powered off. while the second edition features behind-the-scenes interviews, an all-access backstage video, and a qualifying exam for contestants. Afterwards, Hasbro Interactive's successor
Atari Interactive released a
PlayStation 2 edition in October 2003 (with a PC version released the previous year). Then in 2008,
Sony Online Entertainment created a
Jeopardy! game for the
PlayStation 3 through the
PlayStation Network, using the
Gamebryo engine. On November 2, 2010,
THQ released
Jeopardy! video games for the
Wii and
Nintendo DS platforms. The company followed those up in 2012 by releasing games based on the show as a reworked version of the Wii version for the PlayStation 3, the
Wii U, and
Microsoft's
Xbox 360. On November 6, 2017,
Ubisoft released
Jeopardy! for
PlayStation 4, and
Xbox One, using the
Unity engine. It would later be released on the
Nintendo Switch a year later. However, the generic female host takes over Alex Trebek (before his death in 2020), while Johnny Gilbert still remains as announcer on the title screen, following the show's opening titles.
Handhelds A
Game Boy version of
Jeopardy! was released by GameTek in 1991, and went on to spawn a "Sports Edition." Both versions were ported to the Game Boy's
Sega rival, the
Game Gear. The gameplay in the
Sports Edition is identical to the Super NES and Genesis versions, though the portable versions lack the
digitized voice and image of Alex Trebek and support only two players (where the console versions support three).
Tiger Electronics also released several
Jeopardy! electronic games of its own, including a version for its
Game.com system. In 2004, Majesco Entertainment planned a port of
Jeopardy! for Game Boy Color, but those plans failed to materialize because the handheld had been discontinued by then. In 2010,
Sony Pictures Television, the show's production company, released an adaptation for the
iPhone,
iPod Touch, and
iPad. The system was updated in 2012 with a number of online and local multiplayer modes.
Other games There have been many adaptations for
personal computers. The first was released in 1987 by ShareData, which also released versions for the
Apple II and the
Commodore 64. Sony Imagesoft later released an MS-DOS version in 1994, along with the Sega CD version. In 1998, shortly after GameTek's closure, Hasbro Interactive created a Windows edition of
Jeopardy!, which was followed up by a
Mac version developed by
MacSoft in 2000, and later by an updated version published by Infogrames in 2003. The show's latest Windows adaptation was a "Super Deluxe" edition released by
Encore, Inc. in 2008. In April 2011, GSN's interactive division teamed up with
Sony Pictures Consumer Products to develop a
Jeopardy! online game for
Facebook, but that game has since been taken down. As of March 2013, video game adaptations of
Jeopardy! also exist on
Twitter,
Android, and the
Roku Channel Store. ==
Classroom Jeopardy! ==