[quote name=\'DrBear\' date=\'Jun 27 2004, 03:56 PM\'] Old geezer (47) that I am, I could. I still maintain that putting the puzzles in limited the choice of words and made it easier to guess them (if you have a puzzle that is pointing for, say, "Friends," and you have an idea that's the case, it's going to be very easy to guess, say, "apartment.") [/quote]
I really liked the dimension that the Password Puzzles could, and at times did, add to the show. Having the other words in the puzzle as context made it possible for a good player to play both the puzzle and the word at the same time. However, a lot of the puzzles, in practice, made me cringe. (Particularly the type where, read out in order, they described the answer, rather than being pointers to it, like "First" "Moon" "Walking" "American" "Man" for Neal Armstrong.) Super Password, as best as I can recall, had a higher quality of puzzle than P+ did, and made for better gameplay.
Also, we haven't mentioned that TPiR '73, the show for which Goodson and Todman are best known for today, was not just a minor tweak of the format -- it turned the main aspect of the game into a fairly minor part of the show.