Family Feud: 2010 Edition
Parent game
The 2010 Edition is a home game adaptation of the current iteration of the long-running competitive game show Family Feud. Two families face off against each other by predicting the most popular results of a survey question given to 100 people. Points are awarded based on the number of surveyed people who gave that same response (i.e. 63 people equal 63 points). Suggesting an answer that was not given by those surveyed gives that family a strike. The first family to reach 300 points wins the game and goes to a bonus round to try and increase their final score. The 2010 edition offers two gameplay modes. A single-player mode pits your team against ten families of increasing intelligence across ten "episodes" of the show. Success awards new clothing and hairstyles for your in-game avatar. A multi-player mode pits two teams (the actual number of people on the teams limited only by who is in the room) against each other in a full episode of the show.
Part of collection:
Family Feud
(last 3 games)
Family Feud: 2012 Edition is a video game based on the TV show "Family Feud". It is the first Family Feud video game to be released on Xbox 360 and the third to be developed on Wii by Ludia Inc. In Family Feud, one hundred people were surveyed and gave answers to various questions. Two families then battle each other by trying to guess the top answers to each question. In each round, a member of each family is asked to join the host on the center of the stage to answer one question. The quickest player to buzz in gets to answer first. If he/she doesn't give the number one answer, the other player can give his/her answer as well. Whoever has the best answer will then decide to either "play" or "pass". If the player decides to play, his/her family will have to guess all the answers to win the round. If the player decides to pass, the opposing family will have to find all the answers. Each wrong answer results in a strike. After three strikes, the other family has a chance to steal the points. To do so, they must find one correct answer that hasn't already been given. When all the rounds are over, the family with the most points gets to play "fast money". In "fast money", the player is asked to answer the five same questions twice (or in multiplayer mode, two players can each answer the set of five questions). If the player gets 200 points or more in the "fast money" round, he/she wins $20 000! Family Feud: 2012 Edition includes over 2000 survey questions, three difficulty levels (easy, medium, hard), a party mode with up to 4 players, bonus videos featuring Steve Harvey and lets the player play as his/her avatar on Xbox 360 or Mii on Wii. In challenge mode, 1 to 4 players can play cooperatively against 16 different families. Each family has its own themed alcove (a beach, a mansion, a spaceship, a prehistoric den, a haunted house, a private boat, a bowling alley, etc). In party mode, 2 to 4 players can compete against each other. Kinect features were developed for the game on Xbox 360, but were eventually dropped as they didn't add any fun factor to the game. It was then decided to also port the game to Wii.
Family Feud: Decades, also known as Family Feud: 2011 Edition, is a trivia game based on the TV game show Family Feud. The game is set across four different decades: the 70s, 80s, 90s and 2000s decades. Each decade is represented by a different stage set, which is based on the TV set of that era. In the show, 100 people have been surveyed on different subjects and their answers have been collected. It's up to the two families who battle each other to guess what the top survey answers were for every question; the family with the most points wins.
Family Feud & Friends is a mobile entry in a series of games based on the TV game show Family Feud.
Part of franchise:
Family Feud
(last 3 games)
It's Family Feud 2, the sequel to the smash hit, with new questions, awards, and mega-bonus points for winning streaks and top answers! Try to guess what 100 people said when they answered our survey. Beat the average score, or go head-to-head with a friend or an entire family! Hours of fun with over 2,000 questions and 10,000 answers! Fabulous art, music and commentary from the game's host! Survey says: Let's play Family Feud 2!
Family Feud on mobile phones is an online only game played via a fast paced, massively single player mechanic where the game never stops, users just join in and leave at will. Each round contains three normal questions and a Fast Money set of questions. This implies that you might join in the middle of a round, but as rounds are short and each question is only up for 30 seconds, it's not long before there is a new question to a leaderboard to view. Between questions and at the end of a round, the top 20 players are displayed. Players are scored on accuracy and time. For every second that you delay in answering your total possible score lowers.
Could be interesting
This 2012 update of the classic Jeopardy! quiz game includes 3,000 clues in the Jeopardy!, Double Jeopardy! and Final Jeopardy! formats. The game also includes the premier of the "Jeopardy! Clue Crew" for the first time in a home game format, while also featuring host Alex Trebek and announcer Johnny Gilbert. Between rounds multiplayer mini-games are offered as breaks. Online multiplayer is supported to play against other players.
An adaptation of the TV quiz show where two families compete for cash prizes. These versions were all published by GameTek and developed by various developers between 1991 and 1994.
Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader? Back to School is a trivia game based on the TV game show Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader.
If you’ve always anted to be on Jeopardy! (and who hasn’t), play the world’s most popular ‘answer and question’ game and feel like you’re on the set! You’re standing in front of the cameras, hand at the buzzer, as host Alex Trebek calls you by name and peppers you with categories and dollar amounts. Win the most money, become champion and see your score immortalized in the Jeopardy! Hall of Fame. The unique response to directory on CD-I makes this version as fast-paced as the television game itself.
Jeopardy! is a conversion of the long-running TV quiz show where the answers are given and contestants must provide the questions. Compared to the Genesis version released a year earlier, the Game Gear version features only about half the number of questions, and replaces the console version's photo-realistic style with a more cartoon-like approach.
Jeopardy! is a turn-based puzzle game developed by Sharedata and released by Sharedata in 1987. Jeopardy! runs on MS-DOS. This version of Jeopardy! was the first release based on the TV game show of the same name.
Based on the hit television show, Jeopardy! for Game Boy features over 1,500 questions and support for two players. Before starting, you can enter the number of participants and their names. Gameplay consists of moving a cursor and selecting a category and money value. After the question (or answer) appears, you have ten seconds to buzz in. Answering involves selecting each letter on an alphabet display to spell out one or more words. After the first two rounds, players with positive dollar amounts can play in Final Jeopardy! The player with the most money at the end of this round wins the game. For two-player games, you can either link two systems together or share one Game Boy.
Quiz game for the Game.com based on the homonymous TV show.
Super Jeopardy! is based on the popular Jeopardy! TV game show. In this digital incarnation, 4 players compete at answering reverse trivia questions in trademark Jeopardy! fashion-- i.e., the host provides the answer and a player has to provide the questions. As many as 4 human players can participate, with the remaining slots filled by the computer. Competition takes place in quarter-final, semi-final, and final round modes. A player will select a question from one of 6 categories. The game gives the answer to the question and the players use their controllers to buzz in. At that point, a player has 80 seconds to spell out the question (and the computer has already provided the "What is..." question preamble). If the player gets the question wrong, that player loses money and the remaining players have an opportunity to buzz in.
Take the challenge of creating questions for answers with JEOPARDY! 2ND EDITION. All of the elements from the television show are here: the Jeopardy! and Double Jeopardy! Rounds, along with the big blue board and daily doubles. All of the answers retain the difficulty found in the game show, meaning your brain will be pushed to its limit. If you're looking for something a little different, get your hands on JEOPARDY! 2ND EDITION and take the challenge.