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Trivial Pursuit is a board game in which winning is determined by a player's ability to answer trivia and popular culture questions. Players move their pieces around a board, the squares they land on determining the subject of a question they are asked from a card (from six categories including "history" and "science and nature").
Each wedge is a different color and represents a different category, with the categories requiring two correct answers to fill a wedge. Red replaces the brown (now purple) wedge from the board games. In the first three rounds, each player receives two turns consisting of a category choice followed by a question posed by host Martindale.
Trivial Pursuit mini packs contain 120 cards with 720 questions in the standard six-color format but no categories. Trivial Pursuit Mini Pack - Sports (1987) [25] Trivial Pursuit Mini Pack - Rock & Pop (1987) [26] Trivial Pursuit Mini Pack - The Good Life (1987) [27] Trivial Pursuit Mini Pack - War & Victory (1987) [28]
Talpa Studios, founded by “The Voice” and “Big Brother” creator John de Mol, has launched “Trivial Pursuit,” a quiz show format based on the Hasbro trivia game, at TV market Mipcom in ...
The CW is expected to make an official announcement soon about the “Trivial Pursuit” and “Scrabble” game shows. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week
All questions were toss-up questions worth $500 ($1,000 in some earlier-taped episodes). There were no specific categories; each correct answer simply filled in one wedge, regardless of color. The first player to fill all six wedges of their token won the game. The three wedges from the first round carried over, so three correct answers won the ...
The CW has handed series orders to Trivial Pursuit and Scrabble, new game shows based on the classic Hasbro board games. Neither series currently has a host, which is likely to raise eyebrows ...
The Trivial Pursuit game that they developed was trademarked on November 10, 1981, and 1,100 copies of the game were released later that month for sale by retailers for $15. [4] The company they formed to market the game, Horn Abbot, lost money on each of these initial sets, which cost $75 each to manufacture. [4]