mrgray wrote:
zog741 wrote:
mrgray wrote:
Assuming you can ace the final round, 50k is not an issue. I usually go into the final round with 24 - 30 k. (My matching round is atrocious most times). In fact, last game I was looking at a score of 52 k if things ended well. Unfortunately I am cursed and ended with 41 k. :p
Week before that one question cost me 7k in the final round, counting the bonus.
The Arts is my second-shakiest category, so when, that as my 2000-point final category question. Of course, the final question in the game always is that one category; I do wish they would randomize the order of the final round. I can't count the number of times I've had a perfect matching solo round only to blow the last question.
To date, the worst game of Six I've had (current version) was one where I had 27K going into the final round, and then had six straight question in the final where I had no clue, and missed five of those question; final score around 28.5K.
-- RWM
I sort of like the set order of the questions. I always bet the same way: 4,3,2 5,1,6
I am pretty shaky on arts too, but I place the 6 at the end in order to try to be as competitive as possible at the last second and pull off an upset in case of any close local games. Also if I blow the first questions I can shake it off with the knowledge I have the 5 and 6 k questions to make up for it. Besides, you ain't living on the edge until you end the game with a 10,000 point question.
Besides, if you were going to blow 1 out of 6 you were going to do it no matter the order. Less of a blow realizing it before the last question, I suppose. So far the days where I've had the best finals were days I had lower than normal going into the final.
What do you mean current version?
You wager the most points on your best category and the least on your worst, the order of the questions means squat. You're going to see them all eventually, your score will be the same regardless. Don't over think a simple strategy.
The original version of Six was worth 62.5k and in an infinitely better format. They changed the game primarily to show off snazzier graphics, something trivia players don't give two shits about. The format was as follows.
Round 1, 12 questions in 2 sets of 6. First set worth 500 each, 1000 point bonus for answering all six correctly. Second set worth 1000 each, 2000 point bonus for answering all six correctly. Round worth 12k.
Round 2, matching. Six questions where you have to match 6 items. 250 points for each correct match, 500 point bonus for matching all 6. A manly round, not the wimpy matching four currently used. Round worth 12k.
Round 3, 12 questions in 2 sets of 6. First set worth 1000 each with three possible answers, 1000 point bonus for answering all six correctly. Second set worth 1500 each with four possible answers, 1500 point bonus for answering all six correctly. Round worth 17500 points.
Round 4, same as it is now but with no bonus for answering all six correctly. Round worth 21k. Total points 62.5k.
Happy to say I did break 60k in this format solo.
For your education, five years ago we had much better premium games. Every game BT has tweaked has been for the worse. Spotlight didn't have a final question originally. Playback didn't have a headliner or the silly pound round. We had two sports games, Sports Trivia Challenge and Sports IQ, now we have no sports games. We had Passport, a geography destination game, that was axed. Showdown is the only game still as great as it once was, and that's because they haven't touched the format.