Bankgiro Loterij Kluizenspel

By | March 12, 2014

Excitingly Talpa have yet another Dutch lottery show just started – Kluizenspel – Safe Game – which is apt because it features very little in the way of new ideas, although what’s there hangs together fairly well. It’s Pressure Pad with a budget, basically.

Fronted by Mark Klein Essink (who also in hosting Kies de Kluis almost a decade ago has the monopoly on hosting Dutch quizzes based around safes), a member of the public must try to find €500,000 in cash hidden in one of seven safes. To help him, he can eliminate six of them by playing games against members of the audience – the audience are split into what looks like six groups of 25, and each has three representatives put forward. Given a clue to the nature of the game and the basic information on the representatives, the player must pick one to play against. If the player wins then a safe is eliminated, if the audience member wins then they win €5,000 (and it sounds like the rest of their section split €5,000 as well). The rounds in the first episode (titles my own) were:

  • Wipeout-esque quiz – contestants take it in turns to pick from a list of nine people, six of which fit the given clue – “which six have appeared on the front cover of Playboy?” first to three correct answers wins.
  • Letter game – 60 seconds of rapid fire questions where each of the answers begin with the same letter. Control player decides which set he will take and which the audience player will take. Highest score wins.
  • Memory Video – a short video is played (about a minute) and then multiple choice questions are asked on the buzzer – you can buzz in before the answers come up if you want. First to three wins.
  • Clock Quiz – Chess clock style list quiz where you had to name three things that fit a given set before control passes to your opponent. Both players begin with 75 seconds on their clocks, time doesn’t start until question read out, player can opt to pass and take another question with a ten-second penalty.
  • Timeline – Put three things in date order. Control player goes first, first to three wins.
  • Number quiz – Buzzer quiz where the answers are all single digit numbers. First to three wins. The resulting five digit number is the winning Bankgiro Loterij number for the week, and that winner will win a multiple of whatever the control player takes home.

After the six rounds it’s time for the final – the contestant either selects a not-eliminated safe OR they can take guaranteed money – between €20k and €75k by spinning the large wheel – this is quite neat, the pointer round the outside moves rather than the graphics spinning. It also feels like a little bit of an anticlimax, having made the focus the safes all the way through, they can be bought out of the game in a manner that feels rather incongruous. I wonder if it might have been better if they spun the wheel first and then decided if they wanted to guess or not, although I expect that’d lead to a few too many massive money winners. Anyway, the show’s OK but nothing to get too excited about, would probably work over here as a Saturday evening thing better than Beat the Crowd would, but that’s not saying much. It does seem odd that Talpa might be able to get people talking with their reality and reality game efforts (The Voice, Utopia), but their shiny floor shows seem rather staid in comparison.

Friend of the Bar Squared Eyes has a review and large pictures on his blog. If you want to watch this yourself I’m afraid you’re going to need to use the dark arts, as it’s seemingly geoblocked. You’re welcome to try anyway.

Convention

By | March 9, 2014

Likely to be of interest to Bother’s Bar punters, fans and crew of Knightmare are trying to put together a convention at the old Norwich studios the show was originally filmed, and includes a premiere screening of the extended version of the Geek Week episode and the chance to play one of the original rooms using the original chromakey technology.

 

You can donate, and thereby get yourself a ticket from Indiegogo. They’re after £12k and have sixteen days left, expect it will be a bit touch and go, but if you want it then go for it.

MEANWHILE Cory Anotado is back with a new series of Game Show Gauntlet on Youtube live on Sunday nights. It includes adult references, swearing and really good recreations of rounds of shows (and an amusing use of Box 23)  – the first one was this evening, you can watch it below and also subscribe to his Youtube channel so you need never miss it.

The burgeoning Japanese Puzzle Drama genre

By | March 7, 2014

I can’t really claim much credit for discovering this, thanks to Clavis Cryptica (webpage, Twitter) and long term FOTB Chris M Dickson (Twitter) for basically doing most of the research, but here I present it for more general perusal.

Basically Real Escape Game TV has become a mildly popular occasional show in Japan over the last year. They are based on (and indeed they co-produce the shows) SCRAP’s Real Escape Game events – basically the original in the increasingly popular “escape the locked room against the clock by solving lots of puzzles” thing like Hint Hunt, Clue Quest and so on. And now they’re up for awards.

It’s essentially a 24-esque drama where the terrorist Nazootoko plans to destroy things but usually leaves a clue in the form of a puzzle as to how to stop said thing from happening. Whilst the officers in the show try and foil his plans (which they invariably do) you at home are also invited to playalong and solve the puzzles, playing in real time with an app or online, apparently with prizes going to those who perform best.

It’s a strange idea – they’ve spent all that money on a drama and then they expect you to concentrate on solving puzzles instead of watching it. But it appears to work. It shows a running total of how many people are logged in to play and (I’m extrapolating from translated Wikipedia) how many people have apparently got all three right. As that second one seems to start counting up after the second puzzle, presumably online players get them all at once or early with a deadline for each one?

Anyway, you can judge for yourself, the first episode is right here.

But the plot deepens. there was also a full drama based on the locked room puzzle apparently only shown in the Kanto region of Japan – Real Escape Game Girls Behind Closed Doors – Five 15 year-old schoolgirls wake up to find themselves in a room where a puzzle is projected on a wall. They’re told they have thirty minutes to work out the code to escape or they’ll die. This is more character led than the big scale show but similarly each episode has a puzzle to solve and the people who work it out fastest at home getting mentioned on the next episode. Unfortunately for our girls escaping the room leads to another room and another puzzle but presumably at the end of episode 11 they escape. It’s got a really neat Cube-esque feel and aesthetic. The only thing it lacks is english subtitles.

You can watch episode one (and with judicious use of cut and paste and locked-room logic most of the episodes – the final episode isn’t labelled 11 and is extended) on DailyMotion. Here’s an advert for it:

We’re not normally so explicit with this sort of thing but you can also torrent it at your own risk. Make sure you’re downloading the torrent not the malware.

Show Discussion: Timeline

By | March 4, 2014

Timeline_show_support06New episodes Thursday 9pm, repeated variously across the week,
Challenge TV

New Challenge original programming, which is good to see, and this sounds like a proper old-school quiz, fronted by a proper old-school entertainer host Brian Conley. I always liked Conley growing up, so I hope this works out for him.

Lewis Murphy saw an episode of this being taped and you can read his account of things here. Basically it’s based around putting things in a given order. Format sounds basically well thought out (even if it’s not quite as clever as I originally envisaged), we’ll see how it comes across on screen.

But if you can’t wait until then, there’s an app out! Currently iTunes only with Android to come and it’s actually pretty slick and worth a look – it’s free with unlockable question packs (general knowledge is unlocked, sport and TV can be bought although I don’t know if the sport and TV questions that feature in general knowledge are the same or different to the ones that come in a specialised game) and perishable lifelines. I’ve had a couple of repeat questions already which isn’t great, and some of the items are a bit esoteric I think but at least it hasn’t cost anything and is diverting enough to download. There’s also a weekly challenge promising different questions every week.

The survival mode sounds like the show’s endgame writ large, and if that is the case given one timeline to finish within 45 seconds double or nothing I’d almost certainly always go for it if it’s as quick to iterate your way to the correct answer it is here.

Scream If You Can!

By | March 1, 2014

So the German version of Release the Hounds aired this evening on ProSieben, just shy of two hours long and with five contestants instead of three, and hosted by German The Voice host Thore Schölermann. It was filmed in the same location as the original.

Main differences (I won’t go into too much detail in case any future contestants do some research) – the team were split into a pair and three and sent on their separate ways, there was a bit with a car and another bit which was a treasure hunt in a graveyard which was fun, although as ever as the scenarios (which were otherwise basically the same as the UK one) can’t be lost it was rather tensionless. The way the team rejoined each other after splitting was thoughtfully handled.

Outrunning the dogs has become a bit easier – whereas before (correct me if I’m wrong) you had to cover 80m, 100m and 120m (60, 90, 120?) with the dogs starting at the 150m mark, now it’s a straight 90m dash with the dogs starting 70m behind and gaining ten metres after every scenario. This seems to feel much more doable, with someone winning big money with a 40m headstart (although the final round at thirty metres was a loss). There were five cases worth €70k total (about €20k from the first three cases, the same figures as our ones, then ~€20k and ~€30k for the last two). The losers just get up and talk to Thore straightaway and they all celebrate at the end which is honest if rather safe.

Overall whilst I thought it developed the ideas from the UK pilot fairly well but it’s still not hitting me in a way I really want it to. But if there’s anything we’ve learnt this evening, it’s that people shouting swearwords at surprise entities is universal.