Quick rundown of the pilot format (and seriously, you'll see how kitchen-sink this was as we go along):
- Each family given an initial bank of $2000.
- Bullseye questions aren't faceoffs; Ray goes down the line to each family member, asks a Bullseye question, and the top answer adds $1000 to the bank. There are also monitors labeled "$500" and "$250", presumably for the #2 and #3 answers, but no mention is ever made of these, so that idea must have been scratched very close to taping.
- Regular FF time, 1x-2x-3x, 300 dollars (not points) wins the game
- Standard Fast Money
Now, here comes the second half hour, with the first half's winner taking on the defending champs.
- No Bullseye leading off this time; now it's "high-stakes" Feud, with rounds played at 10x-20x-30x, and winnings deposited directly into a family's Fast Money Bank. There's no target score to win here; whichever team finishes the game with the bigger bank gets to play for it in Fast Money. The "steal answers add to the bank" rule gets added in here, as well.
- After those three rounds, now it's time for Bullseye. Trailing team goes first, and each #1 answer is worth $3000. No runners-up on the monitors this time.
- Even if the family that goes second clinches the win early, all five family members still play Bullseye to build their bank.
- Standard Fast Money