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This is a list of British game shows.A game show is a type of radio, television, or internet programming genre in which contestants, television personalities or celebrities, sometimes as part of a team, play a game which involves answering questions or solving puzzles usually for money and/or prizes.
Blockbusters is a British television quiz show based upon an American quiz show of the same name.A solo player and a team of two answer trivia questions, clued up with an initial letter of the answer, to complete a path across or down a game board of hexagons.
Public Library Quiz Bowl: UNC-TV: North Carolina: 1981–2006 Quiz '88: Community Access: Ottawa, Ontario: 1988 Quiz Kids: Syndication CBS Cable: United States: 1949–1956 1981–1982 Quiz Kids: WNAC: Boston, Massachusetts: 1978 The Quiz Kids: ATN-7 GTV-9: Australia: 1957 The Quiz Kids Challenge: Syndication: United States: 1990 Quiz Whiz ...
1980s; 1990s; 2000s; 2010s; 2020s; 2030s; Subcategories. This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total. ... Top of the Form (quiz show) Treasure ...
Starting on the show’s fifth week, a single question was presented with a list of six possible answers. Five of the answers were given by the survey respondents, and one answer was not given. Contestants chose answers one-at-a-time, winning $10 per point or $2,500 for guessing all five actual responses and avoiding the answer with 0%.
Coronet Quick Quiz (1944–1945) Correction Please (1943–1944, 1945) Couch Potatoes (1989) County Fair (1945–1950, 1958–1959) Cram (2003) Crossword (1966; two unsold pilots hosted by George Fenneman) The Cross-Wits (1975–1980) and its revival, The New Cross Wits (1986–1987) Merv Griffin's Crosswords (2007–2008)
Blockbusters is an American game show, created by Steve Ryan for Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions, which had two separate runs in the 1980s. On this program, contestants answered general-knowledge questions to complete a path across or down a game board composed of hexagons.
The two contestants started with 50 points each (30 points when it became a daytime show in 1988) and were asked multiple choice questions with six possible answers but each answer had some odds (Evens (removed by 1986), 2–1, 3–1, 4–1, 5–1 & 10–1) and after each question was asked, the contestants were asked how many points they would like to bet (up to 50 (30 in 1988)) and then ...