- Platform: Windows 98 / 95
- ESRB Rating:
Everyone - Media: CD-ROM
Everyone
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One specific (and crucial) flaw: you have no choice of buzz-in keys in any game other than the solo game, which allows use of the space bar. For any game of live and/or computer opponents, you, as Player 1, 2, or 3, are assigned keys A, N, L. These keys, if tapped repeatedly after the signal lights go off, input the letter of the key! Try frantically deleting seven A's, tagged on to the beginning of a right answer because you typed it faster than your overworked computer could display, only to get a "sorry, that's not right," and you'll experience the kind of frustration I'm talking about.
Only in the solo game can you use the space bar, immune to the above error, and play with reasonable ease. But the solo game doesn't count--there's no competition. It's too easy--I was able to run it up to $121,000 on the first try.
I must admit that my 3-year-old computer is below the specs for this game, as stated on the box--Pentium 166 or higher. But I can state confidently that even if all the features ran at intended speed, this game would still receive a failing grade from me. In this version, Johnny Gilbert, the announcer, reads the questions, instead of Alex! And in the real version, you time your response to the end of the question, not the lights on your console. Michael Dupee, the T of C winner, says waiting for the lights is a guarantee you will lose.
One of these days, I'll get the call to go to Sony Pictures Studios, and if I manage to win, it won't be because of this strangely mutated version of "Jeopardy."
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