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Pages in category "British children's game shows" The following 56 pages are in this category, out of 56 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
The team which answers correctly takes control of the game and is given a further four questions to answer. The subjects includes Maths, English, Science, History, Geography and News. There is also Test the Teacher , where the class' teacher answers pop-culture questions, and Pet Subjects , where the class chooses a subject to be questioned on.
50/50 is a British children's television game show for BBC television. Airing on BBC One's children's television block, it was first broadcast on 7 April 1997 and ended its run on 12 July 2005 after 9 series. Repeats aired on BBC One, BBC Two and the CBBC channel until 2009.
Let's Play is a British preschool television series, co-created and presented by Sidney Sloane and Rebecca Keatley. It has run since 2012 on the BBC CBeebies channel. Series 1 was filmed from April to July 2012, while series 2 was filmed from June to August 2014.
Podd is an educational game for the BBC Micro and Acorn Electron published by Acornsoft in 1984. The main character, Podd, teaches verbs , performing an appropriate animation when a recognised word is typed.
Pass the Buck (1998 British game show) The People's Quiz; Perfection (game show) Peter Crouch: Save Our Summer; Petrolheads; Pets Win Prizes; Play the Game (American game show) Play Your Hunch; Playing for Time (game show) Pointless; Pointless Celebrities; Pop Quiz; Pressure Pad; Prized Apart; Public Opinion (TV series)
The British quiz show (hosted by Ross Kemp) involves a group of contestants who individually take turns to cross the 'Bridge of Lies', a digital floor that gradually displays both correct and wrong answers for a given category, and contribute toward a final cash prize.
Granny's Garden is an educational adventure game for the British BBC Micro computer, released in 1983. [6] [7] It served as a first introduction to computers for many schoolchildren in the United Kingdom during the 1980s and 1990s.