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Bonus games with no relation to the main game

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clemon79:
[quote name=\'zachhoran\' date=\'Jun 21 2003, 05:11 AM\'] Technically, the spin round on Second Chance and PYL was called a "bonus round" as reported in ATGS several years back. At least it was called that by Jan McCormack, the game's creator. [/quote]
 Well, in that case, Jan McCormack was wrong, too. I don't care WHO claims it is, there's a pretty well-established definition of what constitutes an endgame or bonus round, and that ain't it.

Robert Hutchinson:

--- Quote ---Actually, [TJW90's] endgame does tie into the show because you are trying to earns spins of the \"reels.\"
--- End quote ---

I personally wasn't counting the common use of a set piece, especially since it has nothing in common with its use in the main game besides \"pull the lever\". At least the previous TJW endgame had \"reach or surpass X dollars\" as a goal in common with the maingame.


--- Quote ---You know exactly what an endgame is, and you know that PYL doesn't have one.
--- End quote ---

I was remembering the discussion Zach mentioned. There was also the fact that some people in this thread are talking about endgames, while others are talking about bonus rounds. IMHO, you only get to call something a bonus round when you've won some sort of actual prize in the preceding round(s), what with the use of the word \"bonus\" and all.

gsgalaxy82:

--- Quote ---I personally wasn't counting the common use of a set piece, especially since it has nothing in common with its use in the main game besides \"pull the lever\". At least the previous TJW endgame had \"reach or surpass X dollars\" as a goal in common with the maingame.
--- End quote ---
My biggest complaint with the second Devil round was the lack of a Joker, or at least something to tie in with the title. It's like, hello, our show is The Joker's Wild! Did someone forget that when they created this bonus game??? C'mon! Ok, there's my rant for the day. Carry on friends.

David

Starkman:
the most obvious of course is WBMG from the later years of $ale which also doomed the show. with Split Second and Big Showdown being 2nd and 3rd.

 I would dare to venture that indeed Nick Arcade's endame was nothing at ALL like the front game, the frontgame was precptual puzzles (like get the picture) and quizzer questions mixed with playing console games. the endgame was a physcal stunt quest which often benefited a different type of contestant, it also was way before its time, often contestants couldnt tell where they were on the bluescreen or the bluescreen graphics were out of sync (a fatal error to the contestants in most all cases) it was a good idea but W A Y before it's time.

To that end Get the Picture's endgame was also woefully unrelated, the maingame and power surges (asides from the shuffleboard and ring toss powe surges which were alot like funny money's endgame, do a task to earn pieces off a picture to guess) were perceptual puzzles, the endgame was a simple game of memory recall, I always thought that they should have gone with no power surges in round 2 (which had no meaning to the game unlike the surges in round 1 which gave an actual piece of the puzzle) and instead played a choice of power surge like puzzles as the bonus round.

while not an endgame i must say the 2 player round in Where in the World Carmen Sandiego had nothing to do with anything, it was just a find and line up game that wasnt even intresting and had no real application of geographic knowledge, the ordering the list game in the time version was WAY better IMHO however the endgame in the world version was excellent if they didnt tinker with the clear score.

Michael Brandenburg:
Well, I'll add one more to the list: The Magnificent Marble Machine!

   I only got to see a few episodes of it on Cincinnati's WXIX-TV during the summer of 1975, but emcee Art James would tell the game's players that \"you have to earn your marbles\" before they would play the show's front-game -- which, in fact, had nothing at all to do with pinball!

   Instead, the players had to guess words from crossword puzzle-type clues (similar to those that would be later used on NBC's Scrabble, and the first team to correctly guess five words from their corresponding clues got to play the show's giant pinball machine for all the prizes.  (And, on the few episodes of that show I got to see, they only got two balls per game unless they managed to top the game's preset \"Goal Score\" that earned them the third \"Golden Money Ball!\"

   Needless to say, I considered the show's end game a lot better than its main game -- although in retrospect, the show's giant pinball machine was horribly engineered, even incorporating a \"gobble hole\" that real-life pinball machines hadn't had for some 12 years up to that time.


   Michael Brandenburg
   (Now if I had the time, maybe I could build a better MMM from that \"Visual Pinball\" program I turned up last year...)

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