I played. The first part was fine, the second part was blind luck, and thus a turnoff for me. I was working on a project while playing, so I'll do my best to explain the meat and potatoes that I did pick up on.
Premise: Two "studio" contestants play, representing a certain group or demographic. Tonight's episode was Millennials vs. Baby Boomers.
The game itself has eight multiple-choice questions, divided into two rounds of four. The first half questions are survey or opinion-based like "What social media app is most popular with baby boomers?"
A. Facebook
B. Snapchat
C. Instagram
The two contestants predict what they think is the right answer; mobile players do the same. If a mobile player gets it right, they advance. If not, they're eliminated. If a studio contestant answers correctly, money is added to a bank, which they can split via a Prisoner's Dilemma scenario.
In round two, the remaining four questions are personal questions about the studio contestants. One asked the millennial's favorite thing to watch: documentaries, soap operas, and something else. Like all other trivia apps, remaining players split a cash jackpot, which was $5,000 tonight. Eight players won, each taking home $625.
The problem is, as I said above, it's blind luck. There's no context clues that allow you to figure out what the contestant likes to watch on TV, or whatever other personal info. Due to that, I cut out after I was eliminated, so I'll let someone else explain the Prisoner's Dilemma portion, although I'm sure it's self-explanatory.
Like Facebook's other game show Confetti, they take a page from the NBC handbook and stretch 10 minutes of game over nearly half-an-hour. I don't expect a share of $5,000 to be easy, but basically "pick an answer" and hoping for the best isn't much of a game, esp. when I'm basically taking a contestant's word for it when he says he likes documentaries over soaps. I'd love to see a Hit Man style setup where you hear various tidbits during the interview, then get quizzed on that.