[quote name=\'alfonzos\' post=\'157022\' date=\'Jul 9 2007, 03:51 PM\']
Add Jackpot! (Milton Bradley) to my list of recommendations. The game can handle sixteen players just change the values of the riddles to reflect the series. Also generate the values of the target number and jackpot the way the series does.
[/quote]
I own that one, and I definitely can't recommend it. The riddles are absolutely atrocious - a good half of them are downright nonsensical. (From reading Mr. Ottinger's page, I'm guessing whoever did the riddles for Jackpot! also authored the questions for E.S. Lowe's High Rollers.) But the 15 little envelopes do make for handy props when adapted for other games. Numbers 1-3 occupy a space in my box of $otC for the "Instant Cash" bargain.
I've hosted a few game show nights at my place. If you're planning on doing a few games in one night, I definitely recommend kicking things off with Family Feud. It immediately gets everyone into the game, and even in later games when some people are sitting out, the tone of the night's been set and everyone's had the chance to get into it.
Pyramid is foolproof. People will inevitably get themselves worked up and panicked against the clock and will shout out the most absurd things. One of my friends may never live down shouting "Guacamole!" as an attempted answer to "Things associated with hot dogs." ("It's green and chunky, you put it on top...")
If you've got the equipment for it, hook a computer up to a good-sized TV and play Curt King's PYL game. A PS2-style USB gamepad with the free Joy2Key software makes a cheap, serviceable substitute for a big red buzzer. Just program the L3 or R3 button as the spacebar.
Record a few dozen episodes of Match Game to get a decent amount of questions, pick up some blue 4x6 index cards and black Marks-A-Lot markers at Officemax, and there ya go. Do this one at the end of the night, so you're finishing things off with a bunch of people playing at once. Especially if it's the sort of social situation where everyone's got a respectable buzz going, but haven't put themselves over the line.
Though I haven't used it for a party, Pressman's 1 vs. 100 box game has materials and rules that make for a great player vs. mob experience without having to round up 101 people. However, not everyone's a triviaphile, so I've shied away from games centered on knowledge for my parties in the past - though I've been thinking about doing an all quiz show night sometime.
Whatever other games you decide to play, I wouldn't recommend anything with fewer than three players at once.