How Many of These Game Shows Do You Remember?
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Question 1
Who Hosted The Price Is Right For Decades And Often Shouted “Come On Down!”?
Question 1
Which Long-Running Quiz Show Is Famous For Answering In The Form Of A Question?
Question 1
Who Was The Best-Known Host Of Wheel Of Fortune Starting In The Early 1980s?
Question 1
Which Game Show Has Contestants Guessing Survey Answers To “Top” Responses?
Question 1
Who Hosted The Classic Password And Was Married To Actress Betty White?
Question 1
Which Game Show Invited Players To “Make A Deal” For Mystery Prizes Behind Doors?
Question 1
Who Was The Most Famous Host Of The Newlywed Game In Its Classic Era?
Question 1
Which Show Features A Giant Spinning Wheel And A “Showcase Showdown”?
Question 1
Who Hosted The 1984 Revival Of Jeopardy! That Made The Show A Modern Classic?
Question 1
Which Panel Game Show Had Celebrities In A Giant Tic-Tac-Toe Board?
Question 1
Who Was The Classic Host Of Match Game, Known For Fast Banter And Long Microphone?
Question 1
Which Show’s Catchphrase “Big Money, No Whammies!” Became A Pop Culture Staple?
Question 1
Who Was The Face Of Family Feud During Its Biggest Late-1970s And Early-1980s Boom?
Question 1
Which Game Show Has Contestants Spinning A Wheel To Land On Letters And Buy Vowels?
Question 1
What Game Show Asked Couples Personal Questions And Often Revealed Hilarious Mismatched Answers?
Question 1
What Game Show Had Contestants Guessing A Celebrity’s Identity By Asking Questions?
Question 1
Who Was The Longtime Host Of Hollywood Squares During Its Classic 1960s–1970s Run?
Question 1
Which Show Used One-Word Clues To Get A Partner To Say The Secret Word?
Question 1
Which Game Show’s Final Round Is Often Called The “Showcase” With Two Big Prize Packages?
Question 1
Who Hosted Let’s Make A Deal And Was Known For His Warm, Fast-Talking Style?
Question 1
Which Show Uses A Pyramid-Shaped Board And Category Clues For Rapid-Fire Guessing?
Question 1
Who Was The Iconic Host Of The $10,000/$25,000/$100,000 Pyramid Franchise?
Question 1
Which Show Put Celebrities On A Panel And Asked Which Contestant Was Telling The Truth?
Question 1
Who Hosted To Tell The Truth In Its Classic 1960s Era?
Question 1
Which Show Involved Matching Hidden Pictures Behind Numbered Squares, Like A Memory Puzzle?
Question 1
Who Hosted Double Dare, Nickelodeon’s Messy 1980s–1990s Obstacle-Heavy Game Show?
Question 1
Which Game Show Had Contestants Racing Through A Grocery Store To Grab Items For Money?
Question 1
Who Hosted Supermarket Sweep During Its Popular 1990s Run?
Question 1
Which Show Had Silly Skits, Celebrity Judges, And A Giant Gong To End Bad Acts?
Question 1
Who Created And Hosted The Gong Show In Its Classic 1970s Era?
Question 1
Which Game Show Asked “Higher Or Lower? ” When Contestants Predicted Playing Card Values?
Question 1
Who Hosted Card Sharks In Its Best-Known Late-1970s Version?
Question 1
Which Show Used A Tic-Tac-Toe Board With Trivia Questions To Claim Squares?
Question 1
Who Was The Classic Host Most Associated With Tic-Tac-Dough?
Question 1
Which Show Featured A “Dragon” That Could Steal Winnings During Bonus Rounds?
Question 1
Which Show Had Contestants Shouting “No Whammies!” While Stopping A Flashing Board?
Question 1
Who Hosted Press Your Luck In The 1980s?
Question 1
Which Show’s Main Gimmick Was Guessing A Secret Word Using Only One-Word Hints?
Question 1
Which Show Had Celebrities Fill In The Blank With Often-Risqué Answers For Laughs?
Question 1
Which Show Commonly Began With “Here’s Johnny!” And Mixed Interviews With Comedy (Not A Game Show)?
Question 1
Which Quiz Show’s Categories And Dollar Values (Or Points) Are Chosen From A Board?
Question 1
Who Hosted The Original 1960s–1970s Jeopardy! Before Alex Trebek?
Question 1
Which Show Asked Contestants To Identify A Song With Just A Few Notes?
Question 1
Who Hosted The $100,000 Name That Tune Revival In 1984–1985 Syndication?
Question 1
Which Show Had Contestants Shopping For Big Prizes Using Time, Skill, And Strategy Instead Of Cash?
Question 1
Which Game Show Mixed Trivia With A Slot-Machine-Like “Joker’s Wild” Board?
Question 1
Who Hosted The Joker’s Wild For Many Years In Syndication?
Question 1
Which Show Tested Word Skills Using A Board Inspired By The Scrabble Game?
Question 1
Who Hosted The Scrabble Game Show During Its 1980s Popularity?
Question 1
Which Show Used A “Winner’s Circle” Where Partners Gave Clues To Complete Categories Quickly?
Question 1
Which Show Often Featured Silly Couples Questions That Became More Embarrassing Than Competitive?
Question 1
Which Classic Panel Show Often Involved A “Mystery Guest” With Everyone Wearing Blindfolds?
Question 1
Which Game Show Let Contestants Choose Between Keeping A Sure Prize Or Risking A “Zonk”?
Question 1
Which Show Was Famous For Celebrity Center Squares Giving Humorous Answers That Might Mislead Contestants?
Question 1
Which Host Is Most Associated With Sale Of The Century In The 1980s?
Question 1
Which Show Let Players “Buy” Prizes With Their Bank Instead Of Taking Cash Home Immediately?
Question 1
Which Game Show Had Contestants Acting Or Drawing Clues While Teammates Tried To Guess?
Question 1
Who Hosted Win, Lose Or Draw During Its Late-1980s Success?
Question 1
Which 1980s MTV Game Show Quizzed Contestants On Pop Culture Using TV Screens And Gadgets?
Question 1
Who Hosted MTV’s Remote Control In Its Best-Known Run?
Question 1
Which Nickelodeon Game Show Sent Kids Through A “Temple Run” To Retrieve A Hidden Idol?
Question 1
Who Hosted Legends Of The Hidden Temple In The 1990s?
Question 1
Which Nickelodeon Show Featured Video Game Challenges And A Large Arcade-Style Set?
Question 1
Who Hosted Nick Arcade?
Question 1
Which Kids’ Game Show Involved Earning “Mo” Points And Completing Aggressive Physical Challenges?
Question 1
Who Hosted Nickelodeon’s Guts In The 1990s?
Question 1
Which Educational Game Show Had Contestants Track A Thief Around The World Using Geography Clues?
Question 1
Who Hosted Where In The World Is Carmen Sandiego? In The 1990s?
Question 1
Which Show Used Five-Letter Word Puzzles And Often Included “Lingo” Balls Or Counters?
Question 1
Who Was A Well-Known Host Of Lingo In The Late 1980s Syndicated Version?
Question 1
Which Show Typically Started With “We Asked 100 People…” Before Revealing Survey Results?
Question 1
Which Show Had Contestants Pairing Up With Celebrities To Guess Words Under Time Pressure?
Question 1
Which Classic Show Often Included A “Big Deal” Finale Where Winners Could Risk Earlier Prizes?
Question 1
Which Show’s Main Strategy Is Choosing The Right Category And Buzzing In Fast?
Question 1
Which Game Show Used A Panel Of Celebrities To Deliver Answers That Could Be Intentionally Funny Or Wrong?
Question 1
Which Show Typically Started With A “Bonus Round” That Required Uncovering A Word Puzzle Hidden Behind Squares?
Question 1
Which Host Is Most Associated With Truth Or Consequences In Its Mid-Century Into 1970s Run?
Question 1
Which Show’s “Panel” Asked Yes/No Questions To Identify A Profession Or Person?
Question 1
Which 1960s Game Show Was Known For Secrets And Celebrity Panels, Often With Comedic Reveals?
Question 1
Who Hosted I’ve Got A Secret During Much Of Its Classic Run?
Question 1
Which Show Had Contestants Choose Among Doors, Curtains, Or Boxes For A Chance At A Better Prize?
Question 1
Which Show Turned Dating Choices Into A Game With Hidden Suitors And Funny Questions?
Question 1
Who Was A Notable Host Of The Dating Game During Its Classic Era?
Question 1
Which Show Featured A Big “Bonus” In A Dark Room Or Temple-Like Finale For Kids?
Question 1
Which Show Mixed Pop Culture Trivia With A Zany, Fast, Youth-Oriented Presentation On MTV?
Question 1
Which Show Is Best Described As “Trivia Plus Shopping For Prizes” With A Running Total Bank?
Question 1
Which Host Is Closely Linked To The Catchy, Upbeat Style Of Many 1970s And 1980s Syndicated Shows Like Tic-Tac-Dough?
Question 1
Which Show’s Contestants Often Needed To Solve A Word Puzzle While Avoiding Losing A Turn Or Going Bankrupt?
Question 1
Which Game Show Is Most Closely Associated With The Phrase “Survey Says!”?
Question 1
Which Late-1990s Mega-Hit Game Show Asked Contestants Multiple-Choice Questions For Escalating Cash Prizes?
1
Pat Sajak
2
Monty Hall
3
Bob Barker
4
Alex Trebek
Bob Barker became the face of The Price Is Right in 1972 and stayed for 35 years.
1
Jeopardy!
2
Family Feud
3
Wheel of Fortune
4
Hollywood Squares
Jeopardy! requires contestants to respond as questions, turning trivia into its signature “answer-then-question” format.
1
Bob Eubanks
2
Pat Sajak
3
Richard Dawson
4
Jim Perry
Pat Sajak began hosting Wheel of Fortune in 1981 and became the show’s most recognizable presenter.
1
Password
2
Family Feud
3
Concentration
4
The Newlywed Game
Family Feud centers on popular survey responses, with teams trying to find the highest-ranked answers.
1
Peter Marshall
2
Allen Ludden
3
Gene Rayburn
4
Chuck Barris
Allen Ludden hosted Password for years and was famously married to Betty White.
1
The $10,000 Pyramid
2
Card Sharks
3
Let’s Make A Deal
4
Press Your Luck
Let’s Make A Deal featured costumed audience members trading prizes for uncertain “door” deals.
1
Regis Philbin
2
Tom Kennedy
3
Bob Eubanks
4
Wink Martindale
Bob Eubanks hosted The Newlywed Game and became synonymous with its playful couples questions.
1
The Price Is Right
2
Double Dare
3
Match Game
4
Supermarket Sweep
The Price Is Right’s iconic Big Wheel is used during the Showcase Showdown to win prizes.
1
Garry Moore
2
John Charles Daly
3
Alex Trebek
4
Art Fleming
Alex Trebek launched the 1984 Jeopardy! revival and hosted it for decades as its definitive figure.
1
Name That Tune
2
Hollywood Squares
3
The Joker’s Wild
4
Card Sharks
Hollywood Squares placed celebrities in square “boxes,” and contestants aimed for tic-tac-toe victories.
1
Gene Rayburn
2
Jim Lange
3
Marc Summers
4
David Ruprecht
Gene Rayburn fronted Match Game’s best-known versions, blending humor with fill-in-the-blank answers.
1
Lingo
2
Press Your Luck
3
Scrabble
4
Guts
Press Your Luck featured spinning “Whammies,” and players begged for cash while avoiding them.
1
Ken Ober
2
Bert Convy
3
Monty Hall
4
Richard Dawson
Richard Dawson hosted Family Feud’s most famous run, often greeting contestants with his signature charm.
1
Concentration
2
Wheel of Fortune
3
Win, Lose or Draw
4
To Tell the Truth
Wheel of Fortune combines a word puzzle with a spinning wheel that determines winnings and letter choices.
1
Jeopardy!
2
Tic-Tac-Dough
3
The Newlywed Game
4
Name That Tune
The Newlywed Game tested how well spouses knew each other, creating comedy from surprising disagreements.
1
Double Dare
2
Supermarket Sweep
3
Card Sharks
4
What’s My Line?
What’s My Line? featured a panel questioning a mystery guest, aiming to identify them within limited guesses.
1
Tom Kennedy
2
Peter Marshall
3
Chuck Woolery
4
Bob Barker
Peter Marshall led Hollywood Squares for years, guiding celebrity jokes while contestants picked squares for strategy.
1
Sale of the Century
2
Lingo
3
Password
4
The Gong Show
Password paired contestants who gave single-word clues, trying to prompt the correct secret word quickly.
1
Card Sharks
2
The $100,000 Pyramid
3
The Dating Game
4
The Price Is Right
The Price Is Right ends with the Showcase, where finalists bid on two lavish prize collections.
1
Jim Perry
2
Marc Summers
3
Monty Hall
4
Wink Martindale
Monty Hall became the emblematic Let’s Make A Deal host, encouraging trades and teasing “zonk” surprises.
1
Remote Control
2
Super Password
3
Match Game
4
The $10,000 Pyramid
The Pyramid format has partners giving clues to guess category items quickly, climbing toward the winner’s circle.
1
Alex Trebek
2
Garry Moore
3
Dick Clark
4
Gene Rayburn
Dick Clark hosted multiple Pyramid versions, becoming the best-known face of the franchise through its peak years.
1
To Tell The Truth
2
Wheel of Fortune
3
Concentration
4
Double Dare
To Tell the Truth featured impostors and one real person, while a panel tried spotting the honest contestant.
1
David Ruprecht
2
Peter Tomarken
3
Bud Collyer
4
Ken Ober
Bud Collyer hosted the classic To Tell the Truth, guiding the panel through bluffing and reveals.
1
The Gong Show
2
Family Feud
3
Guts
4
Concentration
Concentration asked players to match hidden prizes and uncover a rebus puzzle for bonus wins.
1
Mike O’Malley
2
Marc Summers
3
Greg Lee
4
Kirk Fogg
Marc Summers hosted Double Dare, famous for slime, physical challenges, and chaotic kid-friendly stunts.
1
What’s My Line?
2
Lingo
3
The Joker’s Wild
4
Supermarket Sweep
Supermarket Sweep combined trivia with a timed shopping spree where contestants collected products to total cash.
1
Jim Lange
2
Chuck Barris
3
Allen Ludden
4
David Ruprecht
David Ruprecht hosted Supermarket Sweep and delivered its famous “go wild in the aisles” energy.
1
Name That Tune
2
The Gong Show
3
Sale of the Century
4
Card Sharks
The Gong Show showcased amateur performances judged by celebrities, with a gong ending truly terrible acts.
1
Pat Sajak
2
Monty Hall
3
Chuck Barris
4
Bob Barker
Chuck Barris created and hosted The Gong Show, blending absurd comedy with unpredictable amateur performances.
1
Concentration
2
Jeopardy!
3
Card Sharks
4
The Dating Game
Card Sharks centers on predicting whether the next card is higher or lower, risking winnings each turn.
1
Tom Kennedy
2
Alex Trebek
3
Jim Perry
4
Peter Marshall
Jim Perry hosted Card Sharks, keeping the pace brisk as players made high-stakes higher-or-lower predictions.
1
Press Your Luck
2
Password
3
Tic-Tac-Dough
4
Lingo
Tic-Tac-Dough had players answer trivia to earn Xs and Os, aiming for three-in-a-row wins.
1
John Charles Daly
2
Regis Philbin
3
Dick Clark
4
Wink Martindale
Wink Martindale hosted Tic-Tac-Dough’s best-known run, guiding contestants through trivia and the dragon bonus.
1
Double Dare
2
Tic-Tac-Dough
3
Supermarket Sweep
4
Wheel of Fortune
Tic-Tac-Dough’s bonus rounds included a “dragon” that could wipe out progress if uncovered.
1
Name That Tune
2
Hollywood Squares
3
Press Your Luck
4
The $10,000 Pyramid
Press Your Luck’s flashing board tempted players with cash and prizes, but Whammies could erase totals.
1
Garry Moore
2
Chuck Woolery
3
Bob Eubanks
4
Peter Tomarken
Peter Tomarken hosted Press Your Luck, narrating spins and reacting to Whammies with dramatic, playful flair.
1
Sale of the Century
2
Remote Control
3
Password
4
Win, Lose or Draw
Password’s strict one-word clues shaped its tense teamwork, making careful hinting the whole game.
1
Match Game
2
Jeopardy!
3
Guts
4
Concentration
Match Game became famous for comedic celebrity panels and cheeky blanks, especially in its 1970s revival.
1
The $100,000 Pyramid
2
The Dating Game
3
Hollywood Squares
4
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson
Johnny Carson’s Tonight Show wasn’t a game show, but it often gets confused with classic TV formats.
1
Let’s Make A Deal
2
Family Feud
3
Jeopardy!
4
The Newlywed Game
Jeopardy! uses a category board where contestants select clues by value, building strategy around confidence and speed.
1
Bob Barker
2
Pat Sajak
3
Art Fleming
4
Gene Rayburn
Art Fleming hosted the original Jeopardy! run, establishing the quiz format decades before the 1984 revival.
1
Remote Control
2
Name That Tune
3
Card Sharks
4
Lingo
Name That Tune challenges players to recognize songs quickly, often bidding on how few notes they need.
1
Dick Clark
2
Tom Kennedy
3
Jim Lange
4
Dennis James
The 1984 syndicated $100,000 Name That Tune revival was hosted by veteran game-show emcee Jim Lange.
1
What’s My Line?
2
To Tell the Truth
3
Jeopardy!
4
Supermarket Sweep
Supermarket Sweep’s second half is a timed shopping dash where smart grabbing and speed determine totals.
1
Wheel of Fortune
2
The Joker’s Wild
3
The Dating Game
4
Concentration
The Joker’s Wild used a spinning device to reveal categories and bonuses, creating a flashy casino-like feel.
1
Dick Clark
2
Jack Barry
3
Allen Ludden
4
Ken Ober
Jack Barry hosted The Joker’s Wild, bringing a crisp, classic quizmaster tone to its gameboard format.
1
Lingo
2
Scrabble
3
Press Your Luck
4
Match Game
The Scrabble game show adapted word-building ideas, challenging contestants to solve and form words under pressure.
1
Chuck Woolery
2
Bob Eubanks
3
Peter Tomarken
4
Bud Collyer
Chuck Woolery hosted Scrabble, combining puzzle play with quick humor throughout its 1980s syndicated run.
1
Card Sharks
2
Remote Control
3
Hollywood Squares
4
The $100,000 Pyramid
The Pyramid’s Winner’s Circle is its climactic round, demanding rapid clue-giving across multiple categories.
1
Concentration
2
The Newlywed Game
3
Jeopardy!
4
Sale of the Century
The Newlywed Game was designed for laughs, with personal questions revealing how differently couples remembered details.
1
Double Dare
2
Press Your Luck
3
Lingo
4
What’s My Line?
What’s My Line? featured a mystery guest segment, where the panel wore blindfolds to avoid visual clues.
1
Scrabble
2
Match Game
3
Let’s Make A Deal
4
Card Sharks
Let’s Make A Deal made trading exciting by mixing valuable prizes with jokes like the dreaded “zonk.”
1
Hollywood Squares
2
Jeopardy!
3
Concentration
4
Supermarket Sweep
Hollywood Squares featured witty celebrity responses, and contestants had to judge whether an answer was truthful.
1
Pat Sajak
2
Gene Rayburn
3
Alex Trebek
4
Jim Perry
Jim Perry hosted Sale of the Century, where contestants bought prizes with earned money while answering trivia.
1
Password
2
Sale of the Century
3
Double Dare
4
Name That Tune
Sale of the Century encouraged spending winnings on prizes, creating strategy around when to shop or keep cash.
1
Win, Lose or Draw
2
To Tell the Truth
3
The Joker’s Wild
4
Press Your Luck
Win, Lose or Draw focused on performance-based clues, with teams guessing phrases from drawings or charades.
1
David Ruprecht
2
Bob Barker
3
Bert Convy
4
Tom Kennedy
Bert Convy hosted Win, Lose or Draw, blending celebrity energy with quick rounds of drawing and guessing.
1
Remote Control
2
Guts
3
Concentration
4
The Dating Game
Remote Control was an MTV quiz filled with music and TV trivia, using flashy set pieces and quick jokes.
1
Greg Lee
2
Marc Summers
3
Kirk Fogg
4
Ken Ober
Ken Ober hosted Remote Control, delivering deadpan humor as contestants answered pop culture questions from recliners.
1
Guts
2
Double Dare
3
Nick Arcade
4
Legends of the Hidden Temple
Legends of the Hidden Temple combined trivia with a final obstacle course inside the temple to win artifacts.
1
Jim Lange
2
Kirk Fogg
3
Mike O’Malley
4
Phil Moore
Kirk Fogg hosted Legends of the Hidden Temple, guiding teams like the Silver Snakes through mental and physical challenges.
1
Card Sharks
2
Nick Arcade
3
Supermarket Sweep
4
What’s My Line?
Nick Arcade mixed trivia with video game competitions, reflecting early-1990s arcade culture and tech excitement.
1
Tom Kennedy
2
Phil Moore
3
David Ruprecht
4
Jack Barry
Phil Moore hosted Nick Arcade, introducing game challenges and interacting with its digital, arcade-themed format.
1
Password
2
Concentration
3
Jeopardy!
4
Guts
Nickelodeon’s Guts awarded points for athletic tasks, ending with an obstacle climb up the iconic Aggro Crag.
1
Marc Summers
2
Peter Marshall
3
Mike O’Malley
4
Allen Ludden
Mike O’Malley hosted Guts, cheering contestants through physical events and the final climb up Aggro Crag.
1
Lingo
2
Where In The World Is Carmen Sandiego?
3
The Gong Show
4
The Dating Game
Carmen Sandiego used geography and deduction, asking contestants to chase criminals by interpreting cultural and location clues.
1
Greg Lee
2
Ken Ober
3
Wink Martindale
4
Dick Clark
Greg Lee hosted Carmen Sandiego, acting as the game’s lead investigator while guiding teams through clue-based chases.
1
Scrabble
2
Hollywood Squares
3
Lingo
4
Match Game
Lingo focuses on guessing five-letter words with letter reveals, turning vocabulary into a fast, repeating puzzle cycle.
1
Bud Collyer
2
Bob Eubanks
3
Jim Perry
4
Chuck Woolery
Chuck Woolery hosted the late-1980s Lingo, bringing quick banter to its five-letter word-guessing format.
1
Jeopardy!
2
Concentration
3
Name That Tune
4
Family Feud
Family Feud’s signature line introduces survey-based gameplay, setting up contestants to guess the most popular responses.
1
Press Your Luck
2
Password
3
Remote Control
4
Guts
Password paired contestants and celebrities, making teamwork essential as the clock forced careful and efficient clue-giving.
1
Let’s Make A Deal
2
Card Sharks
3
Scrabble
4
To Tell the Truth
Let’s Make A Deal frequently ended with a high-stakes decision, tempting winners to risk prizes for something bigger.
1
Supermarket Sweep
2
The Gong Show
3
Jeopardy!
4
The Newlywed Game
Jeopardy! rewards quick recall and buzzer speed, while smart category selection helps contestants build large totals.
1
Press Your Luck
2
Hollywood Squares
3
Sale of the Century
4
Name That Tune
Hollywood Squares thrives on comedic celebrity banter, and contestants must decide whether to agree or challenge answers.
1
Card Sharks
2
Remote Control
3
Guts
4
Concentration
Concentration included a rebus-style puzzle reveal, where matched squares helped uncover a hidden phrase for extra winnings.
1
Tom Kennedy
2
Peter Tomarken
3
Bob Barker
4
Alex Trebek
Bob Barker hosted Truth or Consequences for years, mixing stunts with a playful tone that fit early TV variety.
1
Double Dare
2
Press Your Luck
3
Lingo
4
What’s My Line?
What’s My Line? used structured questioning so the panel could narrow down identities through logic and careful follow-ups.
1
Scrabble
2
I’ve Got A Secret
3
Guts
4
Supermarket Sweep
I’ve Got A Secret featured contestants hiding unusual facts while celebrities guessed, leading to humorous reveals at the end.
1
Bud Collyer
2
Peter Marshall
3
Jim Perry
4
Garry Moore
Garry Moore hosted I’ve Got A Secret, balancing witty conversation with the guessing game’s light suspense.
1
Jeopardy!
2
Let’s Make A Deal
3
The $100,000 Pyramid
4
Card Sharks
Let’s Make A Deal’s core thrill is choosing hidden options, where “zonks” and jackpots keep outcomes uncertain.
1
Concentration
2
Sale of the Century
3
Press Your Luck
4
The Dating Game
The Dating Game had one contestant choose among three hidden suitors based on playful answers to quirky questions.
1
Ken Ober
2
Allen Ludden
3
Jim Lange
4
Monty Hall
Jim Lange hosted The Dating Game for many years, keeping a cheerful tone as contestants judged comedic dating answers.
1
Legends of the Hidden Temple
2
Wheel of Fortune
3
Name That Tune
4
Match Game
Legends of the Hidden Temple ends with a tense temple run, where kids dodge obstacles to grab the final artifact.
1
Concentration
2
The Newlywed Game
3
Remote Control
4
To Tell the Truth
Remote Control felt like MTV in game form, emphasizing music, TV references, and rapid-fire comedy beats.
1
The Gong Show
2
Double Dare
3
Sale of the Century
4
Lingo
Sale of the Century combines quiz points with a shopping element, pushing contestants to decide between prizes or cash.
1
John Charles Daly
2
Regis Philbin
3
Art Fleming
4
Wink Martindale
Wink Martindale became a hallmark host of upbeat syndicated game shows, known for smooth pacing and friendly charm.
1
Card Sharks
2
Wheel of Fortune
3
The Joker’s Wild
4
The Dating Game
Wheel of Fortune adds risk with wheel spaces like Bankrupt, forcing puzzle-solvers to balance guessing with luck.
1
Family Feud
2
Jeopardy!
3
Scrabble
4
Name That Tune
“Survey Says!” is a Family Feud staple, revealing whether a guessed response matches the surveyed top answers.
1
Hollywood Squares
2
Match Game
3
Lingo
4
Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? popularized lifelines and a tension-filled ladder of questions to reach the top prize.
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Come on down—your memory is the real prize! From buzzer-beaters to outrageous challenges and iconic hosts, game shows have been TV comfort food for decades. How many of these classics can you name just from a clue? Let’s play!
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