5. Family Feud1,914 points; 48 votes
2006 ranking: 6Scott: Family Feud is the first show in the countdown to appear on every single ballot. It's also the only show in the top ten that didn't receive a single first place vote.
Jason: I did some last second shuffling with my ballot that moved
Family Feud up in the rankings. I remember watching a special that was something like LAPD vs. the LA fire department, or celebrity lookalikes, and I still literally yelled at the TV to play along with the questions, even though what made the episode "special" was suspect. With every host, every new piece of theme music, every change to the set, what makes the show great has never changed. You can pretty much explain the meat of
Family Feud just by asking a question. Anyone can play. Bullseye rounds aside, it's stayed largely intact, even reverting back to its classic set & music! I think, like
Wheel of Fortune, our group may have seen enough of it to last our entire lives, which may explain the lack of #1 votes, but there's no question that
Feud has stood the test of time.
Scott: No question whatsoever. Dawson's version had its iconic run. Combs' version was successful, too. And the current run of
Family Feud is now in its eighteenth straight season. Who would have predicted that?
4. Password2,037 points; 48 votes; 1 first place vote
2006 ranking: 4Scott: It's a testament to the simplicity and brilliance of
Password that it hasn't had a successful version for over 25 years, yet we've ranked it as the fourth greatest game show.
Jason: Perhaps our society's quality of communication has changed over time, but the words in play didn't age.
Password gave game shows a great legacy by popularizing bonus rounds & celebrity partners. I think there's a lot to like about both the puzzle and non-puzzle
Passwords. Do you have a preference?
Scott: I tend to prefer the the puzzle variety, even though I acknowledge that it severely limited the words the show could use. A half hour of straight
Password (even if it's occasionally interrupted by spurts of speedy
Password) gets a little tedious -- having a puzzle to solve helps break up the monotony. Still, I also enjoyed watching teams come up with brilliant clues for the tougher words of original
Password... Cashword was a good attempt to capture that spirit, but it isn't quite the same when you know you have three unopposed chances to build up to the solution. It seems like there should be some effective way to marry the two formats. I can't immediately come up with one, but it certainly
seems like there should be a way.
Jason: I don't think we're alone in that. Both flavors of
Password had their strong suits, and a new version that combines them both would be cool.
Scott: And now, the big winners! The Game Show Fans Greatest Game Shows are...
3. Jeopardy!2,076 points; 45 votes; 6 first place votes
2006 ranking: 22. The Price Is Right2,163 points; 47 votes; 14 first place votes
2006 ranking: 11. Pyramid2,264 points; 48 votes; 14 first place votes
2006 ranking: 3Scott: Ten years later, the top three shows are still the top three shows, but now they've all moved around. There's a lot to discuss -- let's start with
Jeopardy!, which falls from second to third place. When we held our first vote in 2006,
Jeopardy! was still coming down from its Ken Jennings high (the Ultimate Tournament of Champions had been held roughly a year prior). However, ten years later, the show has seen a number of multi-day champions who have exploited the game's strategies with a frequency that hasn't really been seen until now. One of those gameplay trends -- wagering to tie -- resulted in a rule change. I don't want to use this thread to rekindle debate over the other strategy -- Daily Double hunting -- so I'll just say this, which I think is objective and fair to both sides: It's the optimal strategy for winning
Jeopardy!, but it makes the show less fun to watch at home. Could these developments have had an effect on how our group ranked
Jeopardy!?
Jason: Maybe. But I think, like our ardent
Millionaire fans, you'd have to do a lot to shake
Jeopardy! from the proverbial medal podium of the voters. These things & more helped the show stay active in social media discussions, which is mighty impressive for a show with as few changes over the years as
Jeopardy!Scott: The fact that three people left
Jeopardy! off of their ballots entirely really stands out. When I saw this result, I wondered a) whether those omissions were accidental and b) if they were, whether
Jeopardy! could have taken second place -- after all, it lost by just 87 points, so a couple more top-five rankings would have given it the silver. As it happens, of the three people who didn't vote for
Jeopardy!, I know two of them well enough that I felt comfortable asking them whether the omission was deliberate. In both cases, it was.
Jason: I suppose what makes
Jeopardy! fun to watch is not successful with the entire audience, so I get it. Even though strides are always made to make the material accessible, it's ultimately going to be like
Frasier to the other shows'
Friends - perhaps just the air of knowledge is enough to turn off people for whom composers & English lit are completely foreign topics. The cost of merchandise and the basic identification of things we see & hear everyday are practically the definition of accessible. While the
Jeopardy! omissions surprise me in the grand scheme of things, I can understand them.
Scott: Speaking of omissions,
The Price Is Right finds itself excluded from one ballot this year, but even if that hadn't happened, it still wouldn't have won the top spot this time around. This is the result which surprises me the most. In 2006,
The Price Is Right took first place with a pretty comfortable lead. I think a lot of people assumed it wouldn't have any trouble holding on to that position. I'm too close to the situation to provide an unbiased opinion, but I'll note that while all three of our top shows have seen changes in the past ten years, it's fair to say that
The Price Is Right and
Pyramid have seen the most. Still, I think we've concluded that votes for, say,
Let's Make a Deal or
Match Game were reflective of those shows' legacies rather than only their current incarnations. So what happened to
Price?
Jason: With
Price, it's natural to wonder what the changeover to Drew might have done to its rank among the voters. Were there Barker faithful giving it more points than it deserved in 2006? Did those same people downgrade the show unfairly once Drew took over? For me, it merely dropped a spot for the opposite reasons I gave
Feud a jump. The nighttime runs in the '70s, as well as other episodes without as much variety to the games & showcases, showed me there was more to the mix than just the format itself.
Feud just has that spark that nothing can hold back. Like
Match Game, there's evidence that something else is needed on top of the basic game of
The Price is Right. Even if you consider the Cullen version, they too had the bonuses & humor of Bill Cullen to help things. A straight contest would likely not be as great.
Scott: I don't want to sound like a fanboy, or an apologist, or whatever, but I think that Bob Barker really is responsible for turning
The New Price Is Right into the multi-decade hit it became -- for exactly the reasons you allude to. Sure, estimating the value of merchandise is something to which every viewer can relate. But that isn't what present-day
Price Is Right's most memorable moments have ever been about. It was Bob Barker's experience and ability to draw the entertainment out of everyday people that defined this show, even from its earliest episodes in 1972. If both '70s hosts had simply focused on the pricing games the way that Dennis James did,
TPIR would have still had a decent run, but it wouldn't have become an institution.
Jason: And on the flip side, no matter what, every time a Winner's Circle starts, I have to see how it ends. That's been true across all versions.
Pyramid took the top spot on my ballot, just as it took top honors for the entire poll. I can play the game over & over and never tire of it.
Pyramid never had big hitches in the rules or major strategy moments - it's just a pure game. After Dick Clark's passing, there was a fabulous
article on the sweet science of
Pyramid that captured what made it so great. Slowly but surely, we're getting there with the new version on ABC.
Scott: I can't help but wonder whether it's the present-day state of
Pyramid that gave it top honors this year. When the 2006 poll took place, the most recent version we had was the Osmond
Pyramid... and well, we all know what that was like. Since then, we've seen a GSN revival which, though it didn't always have the level of gameplay us hardcore fans like to see in our
Pyramid, was a faithful adaptation that really deserved more than one season. And now we have the ABC version, which demonstrates that the
Pyramid format is just as engaging today as it was when Dick Clark was the host.
Jason: What I hope the new version really does is get the public to associate that game with the
Pyramid title again. In the time before
Pyramid's primetime comeback, there's been Catch Phrase & Heads Up!, just to name a few of the entities that picked up the game mechanic. Now if we do this list again 10 years from now, I don't think it's a certainty these rankings will stay. Naturally, we should get at least one more
Chase-like contender to break into the top 50.
The Price is Right evolved a lot over its 35 years with Bob Barker, and at the rate they're going, we're bound to see it continue with Drew.
Pyramid &
Match Game could continue on ABC and perhaps into syndication. Pat & Vanna & Alex may not be on their respective shows.
Scott: I think what we've proven with this poll is that even among the longest-running game show titles, there will always be a place for us to debate the merits of each. Especially when it comes to game formats that are as diverse as the ones which make up our top ten. As we've clearly seen, opinions change over time, and no one set of rankings will remain the same forever. I like having a decennial poll which makes us reflect on what makes a game show great, both in the past and in the present. The best game shows are capable of being entertaining to multiple generations of viewers, and I too look forward to seeing what the future of our genre holds.
That does it for the 2016 edition of the Game Show Fans 50 Greatest! I'd like to thank everybody who dedicated some of their time and compiled a ballot for this survey. I'd especially like to thank Jason, who made this results presentation exponentially more insightful than what it would have been if I was doing it on my own. Congratulations to the winners, and here's to the continued popularity of the TV game show so we can do this again in 2026!