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The Video Game is an American television game show that aired from 1984 to 1985. It was created by JM Production, and debuted shortly after the cancellation of their earlier game show Starcade. [1] The Video Game was taped at Six Flags Magic Mountain amusement park in Valencia, California.
The original show also had different formats during the week, called The Peep Parlour, which was a computer-designed peep-parlour where videogamers would ask for advice from "The Games Mistress" related to their video game playing queries, and featured Diane Youdale, better known as Jet from Gladiators, and a selection of other characters. This ...
The show would start with the first part of the Face Off segment, where a multiplayer game is used to settle a dispute between two members of the public, or, in the second series, celebrities. This takes the form of a best of three match between the two guests, the winner of which then plays against one of the hosts.
Game Network; Game On (2002 game show) Game Page; Game Story; GameCenter CX; Gamepad (TV series) GamePro TV; Gamer.tv; Gamer's Guide to Pretty Much Everything; Games World; GamesMaster; GameTrailers TV with Geoff Keighley; GameZombie; Gamezville; GIGA Television; Ginx TV; Glitch Techs; Good Game (TV program) Good Game: Spawn Point
Video Wall: Same rules as the TV Round, but using news film clips. One-Minute Quick-Fire Round: Always played as the final round to determine the day's winner. One contestant from each team took part; playing separately, each was given 60 seconds to answer as many questions as possible.
Pages in category "Video games based on game shows" The following 27 pages are in this category, out of 27 total. ... Mobile view ...
Two players (or teams; age-regardless) competed through three rounds in the main game. Each round began with a video arcade-game related toss-up question. The player who buzzed in and answered correctly chose one of five free-standing arcade games in the studio and was given 40 seconds (later 60, then 50) to amass as high a score as possible.
The Game On crew included producer Don Handfield, production manager Keith Worthington, associate producer Brian Mayer, production assistant Michael Leffler, and production associate Nicki La Rosa. [5] Game On shot fourteen episodes and then was canceled after creator and producer Don Handfield left G4 to pursue a career in film. The final ...