So I was on vacation in NYC last week, and went to the Paley Center. There were a few 70's shows in the collection that I was able to see (The Moneymaze, Gambit, and Celebrity Sweepstakes, among others), but one I thought was interesting was a High Rollers episode from 1975. This was from the first version of the series, so the rules were different from the one later in the 70's and the 80's versions. The two main rule changes were:
- no insurance markers for doubles, except in the Big Numbers, and
- instead of the numbers in the front game being in prize columns, each number individually had a prize (two numbers had a half of a big prize behind them such as a car and if the players got one each, the prize was out of play).
I thought this ruleset was interesting; I don't know if I'd prefer it to the one used later on though. Having each number have a prize changes the strategy up a little- if you get a 10 in the first roll of a round, do you play it safe with a 9/1, take a risk with an 8/2 (since snake-eyes on a later roll would be a bust), or try to go for the prizes with a 5/3/2 or even 4/3/2/1?
Though from a budget point of view, the columns made more sense- even in the later 70's version where a prize was added to a column each game up to 5, there was more of a chance a round would be won with just the $100 minimum because no columns would be cleared (and once a column hit the max, there could be games where only 2, 1, or in rare cases no prizes would be added ot the board). The insurance markers in the front game in the later version seems to be a little fairer too- it meant snake-eyes was always safe; either you took the 2 if if it was available, or got another roll.
Any Thoughts?