![]() ![]() who seem to have taken a peek at the answers beforehand. The varying difficulty of the questions that pop up give everyone a chance, unless you’re up against the A.I. You don’t need to have played well throughout to end up winning but it certainly helps.Īll bases are covered in the bank of questions thanks to the six categories on offer Arts & Literature, Science & Nature, Sports & Leisure, Geography, History and Entertainment. The final round aims to fill any gaps in that wedge wheel of yours simply correctly guess the right answer from two options more times than your opponent to earn a wedge. It’s a sort of last man (or woman) standing kind of deal. Again the Blitz mode just turns up the competitive natures and injects a bit of life into what could get a bit dim. This involves choosing the best answer from those still available after other players have chosen theirs, unless you’re in last place then you go first! For example if it asked you to pick the newest released console out of PS2, Gamecube, Xbox 360, Xbox One and Sega Megadrive, if Xbox One had already gone it’d be between whatever is left. Last of the regular rounds is Close Call (and the Blitz version). And what does Blitz do exactly? It makes everyone play at the same time so it becomes a frantic scramble to get those easy answers banked before your opponents do. Grab Bag involves a question and 16 possible answers, players in turn need to find the eight correct answers and avoid the incorrect because if they get one wrong they sit out that entire question. Now onto the Grab Bag round, this is the star of the show or should I say its variation, Grab Bag Blitz is really. Of course you need basic rounds like this to counteract the zany ones but it’s replicated in Switchagories, the only slight change being players take turns in picking a category to get a question from and they can earn double points whereas everyone else gets the standard amount. This is a straightforward ‘everyone pick the answer to a few questions’ mode in which there are four options to choose from. ![]() To explain what I mean I will go over the differing types of rounds you may face starting with Quickstarter which kicks off every game show. My only problem here is the lack of variety, despite there being seven different round types in reality two are just minor variations on two other types and ignoring the final round, the rest have no decent gimmick to them. These rounds consist of multiple choice based questions that everyone must answer in order to earn points, which in turn goes towards earning those trademark Trivial Pursuit wedges.
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