Post by billmcdee on Oct 21, 2016 3:21:33 GMT -5
I don't know I am capable of juggling four shows at once, so my plan is to perhaps wait until I get near the end of this current episode of Gambit PM before I start this game.
As some of you may have noticed, I've started doing some "Whew!" artwork. Yesterday, I created three complete boards of bloopers plus did some for the Gauntlet of Villains bonus round.
Since it is difficult to do the game with an actual clock counting down in real time, what I am thinking of doing instead is during the main game, allowing a total of 8 or perhaps 9 boxes to be selected by the charger, this would include solved bloopers, unsolved bloopers and blocks being encountered.
If the player gets down to their last box, and they aren't at level six, at that time they would have to call for the long shot.
The dollar amounts on the board have been increased by a multiple of 2.5.
In watching several episodes, I have noticed in the bonus game, players maybe get 11 to 12 questions maximum asked, even with additional seconds added to the base 60 second clock. So for the gauntlet, players would score $250 per solved blooper (again 2.5 times $100 from the original show). I would do 12 bloopers per bonus, so a player could get 2 wrong and still win, but 3 wrong and it becomes simply playing for $250 per villain.
My vision is a contestant would get to play the Gauntlet a maximum of 5 times, and each time for a larger money amount.
1 - $50,000
2 - $75,000
3 - $100,000
4 - $125,000
5 - $150,000
Regardless of how a player does at previous runs of the Gauntlet, whatever visit number it is, that's what they would play for. So if they didn't win during either of their first two tries, try number 3 would still be worth $100,000. If it is won all 5 times, that would work out to $500,000.
Any money won in the front game, even if the round is not won, would be kept by the players, cash for chargers with correctly solved bloopers, cash for blockers for any blocks hit.
Finally, if either player were to win in a two round sweep, they would play one extra board for added cash before playing the Gauntlet.
Anyway, that's what I have envisioned for my version of Whew!
Thanks,
Bill
As some of you may have noticed, I've started doing some "Whew!" artwork. Yesterday, I created three complete boards of bloopers plus did some for the Gauntlet of Villains bonus round.
Since it is difficult to do the game with an actual clock counting down in real time, what I am thinking of doing instead is during the main game, allowing a total of 8 or perhaps 9 boxes to be selected by the charger, this would include solved bloopers, unsolved bloopers and blocks being encountered.
If the player gets down to their last box, and they aren't at level six, at that time they would have to call for the long shot.
The dollar amounts on the board have been increased by a multiple of 2.5.
In watching several episodes, I have noticed in the bonus game, players maybe get 11 to 12 questions maximum asked, even with additional seconds added to the base 60 second clock. So for the gauntlet, players would score $250 per solved blooper (again 2.5 times $100 from the original show). I would do 12 bloopers per bonus, so a player could get 2 wrong and still win, but 3 wrong and it becomes simply playing for $250 per villain.
My vision is a contestant would get to play the Gauntlet a maximum of 5 times, and each time for a larger money amount.
1 - $50,000
2 - $75,000
3 - $100,000
4 - $125,000
5 - $150,000
Regardless of how a player does at previous runs of the Gauntlet, whatever visit number it is, that's what they would play for. So if they didn't win during either of their first two tries, try number 3 would still be worth $100,000. If it is won all 5 times, that would work out to $500,000.
Any money won in the front game, even if the round is not won, would be kept by the players, cash for chargers with correctly solved bloopers, cash for blockers for any blocks hit.
Finally, if either player were to win in a two round sweep, they would play one extra board for added cash before playing the Gauntlet.
Anyway, that's what I have envisioned for my version of Whew!
Thanks,
Bill