The Answer Run
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Highest score when the round ends is the winner. | Highest score when the round ends is the winner. | ||
- | To claim their jackpot | + | To claim their jackpot, the players must get eight right in a row. There's a nifty effect to build bars of gold; if the statement hits the top bar, it's treated as wrong. At the end of 90 seconds, four in a row will earn half the jackpot. We're going to make an educated guess that the producers underestimated how much people would play for (jackpots regularly exceed £10,000) as they failed to code a comma. |
There's enough quiz to keep anyone going - about 100 questions in the 42 minutes. Some of the show seems to have been made with an eye to internet memes - the opening episode saw a contestant play the recorder with her nose. Returning to the game, the jackpot feels like it'll be won a bit less than once a week, and the smaller win actually feels quite difficult to win. | There's enough quiz to keep anyone going - about 100 questions in the 42 minutes. Some of the show seems to have been made with an eye to internet memes - the opening episode saw a contestant play the recorder with her nose. Returning to the game, the jackpot feels like it'll be won a bit less than once a week, and the smaller win actually feels quite difficult to win. |
Revision as of 07:03, 6 September 2024
Synopsis
Swipe left or right to match a statement with its category.
Three pairs play in each standalone episode. There's a one-question buzzer race to decide who plays first.
First couple pick one of three categories (in the opening episode: Won-Lost, The Smurfs-Rolling Stones, Peter-Paul).
A statement appears and travels down the screen. The team have until it reaches the bottom to swipe left or right along a touchbar. Each statement has a value from £50 to £500; right answers add to the bank, wrong answers deduct it, and the bank cannot fall below zero.
Up to 15 questions or 90 seconds in the round. After the first team have played, there's another buzzer question to decide who plays next, and the last team has no choice of category.
Second round is almost exactly the same as the first. One change: the statements change in value, alternating from £200 to £400 and back again; the players see when the value changes. Questions here are worth up to £1000.
Lowest score after the second round leaves the show.
Final round alternates between the two remaining couples, with a buzzer question to play first. As soon as the first team give an incorrect answer, the clock will stop and the other couple take over; when they err, the first couple return. Up to 15 questions or 120 seconds in this round, question values again double and halve, with questions worth up to £2000.
Highest score when the round ends is the winner.
To claim their jackpot, the players must get eight right in a row. There's a nifty effect to build bars of gold; if the statement hits the top bar, it's treated as wrong. At the end of 90 seconds, four in a row will earn half the jackpot. We're going to make an educated guess that the producers underestimated how much people would play for (jackpots regularly exceed £10,000) as they failed to code a comma.
There's enough quiz to keep anyone going - about 100 questions in the 42 minutes. Some of the show seems to have been made with an eye to internet memes - the opening episode saw a contestant play the recorder with her nose. Returning to the game, the jackpot feels like it'll be won a bit less than once a week, and the smaller win actually feels quite difficult to win.
Jason Manford brings a lot to the show, and success for The Answer Run may depend on how the audience feels about him.
Inventor
James Allison, Elliot Johnson, Dylan Todd, Amanda Wilson
Theme music
Paul Farrer
Trivia
Jason promoted the new series with a telling confession: the prizes are not huge. He told the TV Times,
- "Because the prize money isn’t life-changing, everyone's a bit more relaxed. Because it's not the sort of money where you could buy a new house or give up your job, everyone was more willing to take a risk and that makes for better telly."