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Barry Joker's Wild Mystery Category ?

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SuperMatch93:

--- Quote from: rjaguar3 on September 20, 2024, 12:06:15 AM ---
--- Quote from: That Don Guy on September 19, 2024, 09:14:56 PM ---I always wondered why they bothered having both the Mystery category, with its doubled amounts, and Potpourri, which was pretty much the same thing but with normal amounts.

--- End quote ---

Maybe a way to change the game strategy up. If the main strategic decision of Joker's Wild strategy is picking a lower-valued question in a category you're more comfortable with versus picking a higher-valued question in a category you're less comfortable with, increasing the value of the mystery category makes it more likely for interesting decisions to come up.

Not sure why they'd keep potpourri around in that case though.

--- End quote ---

Did Mystery and Pot Luck co-exist? To me it seems like the latter didn't come up often later in the run, but it's been a while since I've watched TJW so I could be wrong about that.

rjaguar3:
Going to the main subject of how to deal with running out of questions, I have some observations:

* The Monty Hall Split Second appeared to have only a fixed number of questions programmed into the computer for the Countdown Round. I recall one episode where the round went so long that Monty Hall provided a picture clue and orally stated the three parts of the question. When that didn't end the round, Hall proceeded to do a question without the screen (listing three books of the Bible and asking the contestants whether they were in the Old Testament or New Testament).
* From my observations, the It's Academic Grab Bag round appeared to work on the following system: the first twelve or so questions were specific to the episode (and included three visual questions), and then the show proceeded to a backup set of questions (mostly reused year after year) that was used as needed as the season progressed. (I conclude this based on the observation that different local versions used the same backup questions but on different air dates.)
* From what I saw of the 1990 The Joker's Wild original format, there were 20 categories available in round two. If the round went longer than 10 spins, then the host would offer choices from the unchosen categories in order. If the round went longer than 19 spins (and so all categories but one were played), the host offered the remaining category plus a previously played category. (This system is really simple to implement as a host; you just put the played categories in one pile and the unplayed categories in another, and when you run out of categories, you pick up the unplayed pile and go through those again.)

TLEberle:
I feel like we explored this topic recently, though there's one angle I haven't thought of:

I have never seen anyone spin three of a kind Mystery Meat. Maybe one or two and jokers to fill out, but never all the same. If that's true, if the players exhaust all of those questions and the show doesn't want to do a jump cut and have Jack/Jim/Bill explain why new questions have magically appeared, there is always an out-draw for the player--either another category to choose or a joker that can be converted into one of the other four categories.

rjaguar3:

--- Quote from: TLEberle on September 20, 2024, 10:22:18 AM ---I have never seen anyone spin three of a kind Mystery Meat. Maybe one or two and jokers to fill out, but never all the same. If that's true, if the players exhaust all of those questions and the show doesn't want to do a jump cut and have Jack/Jim/Bill explain why new questions have magically appeared, there is always an out-draw for the player--either another category to choose or a joker that can be converted into one of the other four categories.

--- End quote ---

Would be extremely awkward if it's a champion's catch-up spin and they need to pick the mystery category to stay in the game or win.

MSTieScott:
Maybe the solution was as simple as Jack announcing that he would draw the next question from the top of a stack in his podium. It'd still be a mystery as to what the category would be -- choosing a number had no effect on the contestant being unable to predict what they would be asked.

Or maybe they determined that any single category never went through more than, say, five questions in a game (certainly not a potpourri category, and certainly not a category with doubled values that would end the game more quickly), so they never expected to need a backup plan.

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