Jump to content

Clueless (game show)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Gra W Ciemno)
Clueless
Created byATM Grupa
Directed byOkił Khamidow
StarringKrzysztof Ibisz
Country of originPoland
Original languagePolish
No. of episodes343
Original release
NetworkPolsat
Release13 April 2005 (2005-04-13) –
June 2007 (2007-06)

Clueless (Polish: Gra w ciemno, lit. "Blind Game") was a Polish game show hosted by Krzysztof Ibisz that ran from 2005 to 2007 on Polsat. This game show was known for showing amounts in the contestant's envelopes to the TV viewers (thanks to the on-screen graphics), while not showing those amounts to the contestant until the end of the game.

Gameplay

[edit]

Source:[1]

Each game of Clueless consists of three parts:

Part 1: Picks

[edit]

At the start of the game, the contestant picks several envelopes from a pool of 50 - initially they picked 10, then reduced to 8 and 5 in later episodes. Each envelope has a cheque with the smallest amount being 0 zlotys, and the highest being 100,000 zlotys. There are also two special cheques labeled -50% and -100%, which, if taken to the end of the game, reduce the contestant's final winnings by 50% and 100% respectively.

The contents in each envelope is shown to home viewers, while the contestant does not know which envelope contains what amount.

Part 2: Questions

[edit]

After picking the envelopes, the contestant is asked a series of multiple-choice questions, one for each envelope they have. The contestant is first shown the question, then chooses an envelope to play for in that question, before 4 possible answers are revealed. If the contestant answers correctly, they get to keep the chosen envelope. If not, they destroy the envelope using a paper shredder. The host may allow the contestant to open the envelope before putting it in the shredder.

Part 3: Offers

[edit]

After answering all questions, if the contestant has no envelopes left, the game ends immediately and the contestant leaves with nothing. Otherwise, the host offers an amount of money for one or more envelopes. The contestant can reject the offer; they can also suggest a new offer, but it has to be approved by the host. Once an offer is accepted, the traded envelopes are opened to reveal the amount inside, then destroyed in the same manner as Part 2. The contestant can also choose to open an envelope and immediately claim the amount inside.

Conclusion

[edit]

Once all envelopes have been opened, either as part of an offer or for the contestant to keep, the game ends. The contestant wins any money inside the envelope(s) they chose to keep as well as any money won as part of offers; this amount is reduced by 50% or 100% if the contestant chooses to keep the corresponding envelopes.

Memorable moments and statistics

[edit]

A woman picked 5 envelopes with 100,000 zl in each one of them, but sold them all for 12,000 zl. The host gave her a reward for that, which was 20,000 zl. In all, she won 32,000 zl. This was the only time somebody picked these envelopes.

The most money ever won was 115,000 zl, win by Grasz czy nie grasz host Zygmunt Chajzer and journalist Agata Młynarska.

The least you could win is 6 zl and 25 gr, having 5 envelopes, a 100 and 4 -50%, and the highest is 500,000, each envelope containing 100,000.

International versions

[edit]
Country Name Host Station Premiere Highest envelope value
 Czech Republic[2] Naslepo Marek Vašut ČT1 13 January 2008 150,000
 Greece ? ? Mega Channel 2006 ?
 Spain[3] El negociador Javier Capitán La 1 July 2007 60,000
 United Arab Emirates المفاوض ? DMI ? AED 100,000
 Vietnam[4] Thử tài thách trí Bình Minh HTV7 2 October 2011 – 1 February 2016 50,000,000

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Gra w ciemno". ATM grupa (in Polish). Retrieved 2022-01-13.
  2. ^ Naslepo - Marek Vašut moderátorem nové zábavné soutěže České televize Archived 2013-04-12 at archive.today, 12 January 2008 (in Czech)
  3. ^ "El negociador", un concurso diario para gente valiente, arriesgada y con sangre fría, July 11, 2007 (in Spanish)
  4. ^ Bình Minh “thử tài thách trí” các nghệ sĩ, 22 September 2011 (in Vietnamese)