I'm running down a list of all the pricing games played for a car on "The Price is Right", and trying to figure out which pricing games were not at all affected by the advent of 5 digit prices for cars.
Cover Up obviously was not, as that has always been a 5 digit car game.
More or Less because individual digits or series of digits (Money Game) are not part and parcel to the game itself.
Golden Road, as that has always been played for a 5 digit (or 6 digit) vehicle.
Triple Play, (see More or Less explanation)
*One Away. I put an asterisk beside it because although the game itself remained virtually the same, meaning no free digit given, it was changed from a 4 to a 5 digit readout.
That's Too Much, not affected because whole prices are used, and not digits or series of numbers, plus the game was created well after the advent of 5 digit cars.
Line Em Up, again the same deal, created well after the advent of 5 digit cars.
Pocket Change, another game created well after the 5 digit cars came into being permanently.
Gas Money, the newest game, appears to be played for with price tags, not individual digits.
5 Price Tags, Master Key, Spelling Bee & Switcheroo all were not affected by 5 digit car prices, in other words, these games did not give a free digit. Only Pathfinder has done so, with regard to the SP games currently played for automobiles.
Let Em Roll, Hole in One, Pass the Buck & Stack The Deck all have not been affected by the advent of 5 digit car prices, especially since all but one (Stack the Deck) really doesn't involve the price of the car at all, which is what makes Stack the Deck a really awesome game, to me anyway.
I think that's the entire list of existing car games, at least the ones not affected by 5 digit car prices vs. 4. Any Number, Money Game, Lucky Seven, Temptation, soon 3 Strikes, Dice Game all give a digit for free, and Ten Chances was affected of course because now all 5 digits are used instead of just 4 out of 5.