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9 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
A hipper update of an NBC classic, 3 August 2006
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Author:
truegenius-1 from Houston
A lot of people think of ABC's "Password" as the only word association
game from game show history. Ah, if they overlook "Chain Reaction", how
wrong they are. Michael Davies, the British genius behind "Who Wants To
Be A Millionaire", has dusted off this old show (it seems that Europe
is the new region for game show production companies, think Fremantle
Media's "The Price Is Right" and Endemol's "Deal Or No Deal") and
brought it back with a new look and feel.
The object of the game is simple. Guess the next word in a series of
words, each of which is associated somehow with the word above and
below it. Letters are revealed one at a time and teams alternate back
and forth until a word is guessed (or completely revealed, unlike the
NBC version). Here's an example of a completed chain:
CHOCOLATE
MILK
SHAKE
DOWN
PILLOW
TALK
SHOW
The connections are "chocolate milk", "milk shake", "shake down" (as in
shakedown), "down pillow", "pillow talk", and "talk show".
In this new version of the show, each correct guess is worth $100 in on
the first chain, $200 on the second chain, and $300 on the third. When
a team of three players (usually all friends associated somehow - all
childhood buddies, all comedians, etc.) correctly guesses the last word
in the chain, they get a chance to play a new feature for this edition,
"Speed Chain". The Speed Chain is a miniature chain in which the team
has 7 seconds to guess the middle two words of the chain. An example of
a speed chain is:
THUNDER
S
C
DOOR
The correct answer for this one is:
THUNDER
STORM
CELLAR
DOOR
A Speed Chain pays at the same value for the preceding words in the
chain - not much of a bonus, but some feel the show may make some
adjustments during its inaugural run.
A fourth and final chain is played, but unlike the original version,
now a player on a team must name a wager (from $100 to $500 of their
bank) in addition to selecting where a letter is placed. The team with
the highest bank after this final chain is the day's winner and
advances to the bonus round.
In the bonus round, as on the original show, two players on the team
alternate giving single-word clues to form a question that their
now-blindfolded third teammate must guess (after ringing a bell). Seven
correct answers in 90 seconds doubles the money won in the main game,
while ten correct answers triples it. (The main game money is not at
risk.) This is considerably less than the $10,000 originally awarded
for a successful run in the NBC version.
Viewers old enough to remember clock radios with flip-style numeric
displays or airport information boards with flip-style letters may
enjoy the faux-flip-style graphics used throughout the show to display
the words (or, like me, they'll wonder why the show didn't just bother
getting some real displays!). Those born after 1980 probably won't
appreciate the significance of the flip display paradigm; they'll just
think it's "cool".
When NBC did the show back in the 70's, the venerable Bill Cullen
hosted and celebrities played along with regular contestants. When the
show was syndicated (as "The $40,000 Chain Reaction") it appeared to be
done on the cheap. Thankfully, Michael Davies & company have given the
show a better look, but appear to have skimped on the budget. As the
show is running on GSN, that may be the reason.
"Chain Reaction" will have you calling out answers to the TV; it is an
eminently playable game. With some adjustments and some larger prizes,
the show has the potential to be another word-game hit on GSN, much
like "Lingo".
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