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- The hugely popular computer game becomes a weekly TV gameshow.
- The video game version of the popular quiz show. Players start off with easy questions, but as they move forward the questions get more and more challenging. To help them out, they are given "lifelines" that let them either eliminate two of the four possible answers or take a poll of the "audience" for what they think the right answer is.
- Sarcastic host asks up to three players either seven or twenty one questions from pop culture and science in this classic game show spoof. The game is presented like a radio play with fake ad breaks and only questions appear on screen.
- Video-game adaptation of the TV show 'Who Wants To Be A Millionaire'.
- This spin-off from the "You Don't Know Jack" video game series aims exclusively at a teenage audience.
- Josh "Schmitty" Schmitstinstein hosts 50 more episodes of everyone's favorite trivia-comedy game show.
- This fourth volume of the series starkly changes the setting, from a generic quiz show set to a grunge, industrial mood, framed as a "Ride" on an elevator and at times a car, destined to a place known only as "The Bottom". All five hosts from previous U.S. entries reappear-Nate Shapiro from Volume 1, Cookie from Volume 3 and Television, Schmitty from Movies, and Guy Towers from Sports. Oh, and Buzz Lippman from Volume 2 is back too, but the others don't seem to like him, and he gets being thrown out of the host rotation. (Note: The German version, as before, is only hosted by the singular host, Quizmaster Jack.) Every episode (termed a "floor") starts with a moral dilemma, often without a morally good option. Your answer will decide the theme for that floor, consisting of 12 questions and a grand finale. The 12 questions may be: a regular 4-choice question; a fill-in-the-blank question; a DisOrDat, where one player quickly sorts 7 options into 2 categories (or sometimes "both"); a Gibberish Question, where the players are given a nonsense phrase and must figure out what common phrase its syllables rhyme with; a Roadkill question, where the players must figure out how 7 pairs of clues relate to each other, then how the 7 correct answers relate to each other; a Jack BINGO, where a 5-letter word is given first, and the players must choose the first letter of the answers from that 5-letter word, or; a Guest Host Question, where the question is given by someone other than the host for that floor. The grand finale is the Jack Attack: 7 rounds of word association where the players must buzz in when the additional phrase connects with the central phrase according to the clue.