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Kinect game based on "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire" show in which contestants answer trivia questions for a chance to win a million dollars.

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.

The Price is Right: Decades is a video game based on the popular TV show The Price is Right. It is the third Price is Right video game developed by Ludia Inc. for Wii and the first for Xbox 360, but the very first to allow players to play as their Mii characters/Xbox Avatars instead of Ludia avatars. It is also the first game of the series that is completely rendered in 3D.

There's a lot of money to be won in this Wii title based on the classic TV game show.

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.

A console adaptation of the classic game-show tic-tac-toe format where players select celebrity squares, answer humorous survey questions, and try to claim rows to win. Featuring single-player and local multiplayer modes, quick rounds, family-friendly presentation, and motion/controller-friendly inputs that reproduce the show’s comedic banter and bluff-driven strategy.

The quest for love doesn't have to end after the show's final rose. Now, you can experience the excitement of the TV show in your very own adventure and compete for the affections of The Bachelor or The Bachelorette! It's up to you to make an impression that will leave your suitor with only one option...to offer you the final rose!

A computer game adaptation of The Price is Right.

Don't let the "2010 Edition" fool you - this is based off of the original version of the popular 80's game show Press Your Luck. The garish 1980s set and the flow of the show have both been faithfully replicated in digital form. The game features a single player mode, where the contestant plays through 20 shows of different opponents and increasing difficulty. Alternatively, up to three players can play an episode as contestants in the game's "Party Mode." Gameplay mirrors the game show it is based on. There are two rounds, each with a question phase and a board phase. Players are asked four multiple-choice questions in the question phase. Ringing in first and giving the correct answer nets you 3 spins. The other two players then get a chance to pick their answer to earn 1 spin. Incorrect answers gain no spins. In the board phase, players use their accumulated spins to rack up cash. The board "spins" at random until the player hits a button to stop the cycle, earning whatever cash on the space the board stopped on. If the board stops on a cartoon "Whammy," that contestant's score is set to zero. Four Whammies removes that contestant from the game. The idea is to "press your luck" as long as you can, and then dump remaining spins off on another player in hopes of forcing them into a Whammy. As players win games, they unlock new costumes and hairstyles for their avatar.

The Price is Right features all of your favorite pricing games, from Plinko, to Cliff Hangers, to Golden Road, and more. Experience all of the classic moments from the show with up to four players - you'll hear your name called as you're announced to "Come on Down" to Contestant's Row. Compete from Contestant's Row, through classic pricing games, the wheel, and, finally, get your chance to win the big prizes in the Showcase Showdown.

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.

Experience the thrill of Hell's Kitchen as you prove yourself to Chef Ramsay. Each day is a new challenge as you work your way towards a 5-star chef, unlocking real recipes as you progress. Master service, preparation and cooking while Gordon Ramsay watches over you- yelling and praising based on your performance. Be careful - if he gets too frustrated, he'll shut down the kitchen!

The Price is Right video game is based on the longest running game show in television history. Like the contestants on the game show, players will be able to bid on products, play the famous pricing games, and spin the Big Wheel for the chance to win prizes in the Showcase Showdown. This game features a single- and multiplayer mode for up to four players. Many of the classic pricing challenges that viewers have known and loved for generations, such as Plinko, Three Strikes, Hole in One, and Cliffhanger, will also be in the game. The Wii version will have specialized controls that allow players to spin the Big Wheel, putt through Hole In One, or take a swing at Punch-A-Bunch.