Whew is (unintentionally?) modeled after a football game in that you're trying to make it from start to finish while avoiding blockers in a timed game. Could you revamp it by giving it a fresh coat of paint and making it sports themed?
The problem is that the moment you make the theme sports, you're tuning out most of the female demographic, whether you're in daytime, syndication or anywhere else.
I agree. The blocks are a necessary part of the game, and the race against the clock is what puts the exhilaration into the game. How about this, if we're going to dump the clock: Keep the conventional board, and both players get to place six secret blocks on the board under the usual conditions (e.g., no more than three on the first five levels and no more than one on six). If the contestants both try to block the same blooper, their blocks cancel each other out and the space is left free (so then strategy becomes coming up with a blocking pattern that is different from your opponent so that you don't cancel each other out).
The goal remains the same: Clear one blooper per level to win. The challenger gets first pick. If the blooper is blocked, the opponent who placed the block gets a free guess at whatever blooper was there and gains control if correct. If the blooper is free, the one who picked it gets a guess at it. If he's right, he maintains control and gets to charge. If he's wrong, control passes his opponent.
Completing a path sequentially would be too onerous, I think, so once you clear a level, you don't have to go back to it (e.g., You clear level 1 and lose control on level 2. You gain it back on level 3 when your opponent hits your block and you solve the blooper. You've already cleared level 1, so you go back to 2 and can pass 3 once you clear 2 since you've already solved a blooper on that level).
I like the longshot, so I think it should remain. If level 6 has not been touched, one player can call longshot and advance to level 6. Usual longshot conditions: A secret block is placed by the opponent and there may be a previously-placed block there. If the longshot caller finds the blooper and corrects it, he wins. If not, the game goes to his opponent. Winner of the best two out of three match goes to the Gauntlet.
I know it needs some more fleshing out, but am I onto something? Yea or nay?