Guess The Image

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Guess The Image is a family game show that aired on YouTube. Hosted by Josh Taylor, the show featured two teams of families answering questions and playing games for the opportunity to guess a hidden image on a giant screen made up of 16 smaller screens.


[edit] Gameplay

Two teams of two families, one standing in the red position and one standing in the green position, competed.

[edit] Round 1 (Reveal the Squares)

In this round, an image representing something in a set category was hidden on the 16-square board and the families job is to reveal and try to guess what the image is. A series of general-knowledge trivia questions would be asked to the families, with a correct answer earning that family $100 and a choice of a square. Once a square was chosen, a piece of the image is revealed and the team had five seconds to guess the image. Guessing correctly earned $250, while an incorrect guess lost $100 (although there was no penalty for not guessing). Hidden in two of the squares were "Super Challenges", guessing games played for bonus money and a piece of the actual image. Winning one of these earned another $100 and a guess at the puzzle, but failure to complete it successfully meant the opposing family got the money and the guess.

The round continued until time ran out. If an image was being played when time was called, it would be revealed one square at a time until someone guessed correctly and earned the $250. Multiple guesses were allowed, with no penalties for incorrect guesses.


[edit] Round 2 (Categories)

Each of the sixteen squares on the board now had categories on them. The families accomplished that by answering questions correspondent to that category. As in Round 1, if a team failed to answer correctly (in this case, come up with the allotment of correct answers) the opposing team would be able to steal control and pick a category. If the opposing team are unable to answer that question or failed to answered correctly, then a toss-up question is given. Giving the required amount of correct answers won a team $200 (including toss-up questions), and the team was able to pick a category.

Images were now worth $375, with incorrect guesses still costing $100, and same as Round 1 are two "Super Challenge" squares on the board. The games from knowledge-based challenges remains the same, may sometimes be played at center stage, and were worth $200 each. Again, if time was running short the puzzle in play would be revealed one square at a time until someone guessed correctly for $375. Whoever was ahead when time was called won the game and advanced to the bonus round, dubbed "Final Image". Both families kept whatever they had won.

In the event of a tie, one final puzzle was played with the speed-up rules; whichever team guessed it correctly won the game.

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