Maximum winnings are $16,500.
To expand a little bit on the synopsis: Each pair is a parent and their late-teens/early-twenties child, which, these days, means that the parents more Generation X than Baby Boomers. Each round offers four possible answers - one for each pair and one that doesn't apply to anyone. Parents guess their kids' secrets for $500 for the first question and $1,000 for the second. The kids guess their parents' secrets for $2,000 and $3,000 in the second half. The pair that has the most money after four questions goes on to play the final round - each half of the pair is asked 5 true or false questions about the other, under a 30 second clock, with each answer worth $1,000 no matter how many are right.
The multiple choice idea feels interesting on paper, but in practice watching contestants talk out their choices is not as entertaining as the dual anecdotes of The Newlywed Game. On the other hand, props to the producers for finding a scoring system where runaways are almost impossible but it's tough to win on the last question alone.