On Sept. Unfortunately, the pilot was passed in favor of Lucky Numbers, but Buena Vista decided to instead develop the series for syndication with Colin Mochrie as the host, and Andrew O'Connor who was the first host of the British series from as the executive producer of the series. The first round was entitled Chain Letters.
Each contestant chose one of four hidden four-letter words and had 45 seconds to create as long a chain as possible by changing one letter at a time. Proper nouns and plurals were not allowed, and the contestant could not change the same letter position on consecutive plays. Words had to appear in the Webster Dictionary in order to be valid. At each step, the contestant had to call out both the letter being changed and its replacement, then say and spell the new word.
If a word was invalid, the letter change was undone. Contestants played in descending order of their scores from Round 1. The contestant in control chose one four-letter word from a group of four, then selected one letter to change. Closing credits of the pilot. Game Shows Wiki Explore. Random page. Community portal forum. Explore Wikis Community Central. Register Don't have an account?
The third series aired on Thursday evenings at 7. Scottish aired it on Wednesday afternoons at 1. The sixth series aired on Monday to Friday afternoons, at different time depending which region you were in, since this series was not networked, with the Border and Granada regions airing episodes after a few weeks at 5. Wikipedia entry. Chain Letters. The Superchain, a second before this contestant won by changing the E to a D.
Andrew O'Connor, pointing behind. A celebrity christmas line-up. Dave Spikey, living the dream. A Labyrinth Games site. Design by Thomas. Printable version Editors: Log in. The words were generated by Wordsworth, the show's computer. The first round was entitled Chain Letters Make a Chain in the final and revival series.
Each contestant chose one of four hidden four-letter words and had 45 seconds to create as long a chain as possible by changing one letter at a time. Proper nouns and plurals were not allowed, and the contestant could not change the same letter position on consecutive plays.
Words had to appear in the Longman Dictionary of the English Language Chambers English Dictionary in later series in order to be valid. At each step, the contestant had to call out both the letter being changed and its replacement, then say and spell the new word. If a word was invalid, the letter change was undone. Contestants played in descending order of their scores from Round 1. The contestant in control chose one four-letter word from a group of four, then selected one letter to change.
Both opponents then secretly wrote down their predictions of the word they thought the contestant would make. The contestant could then change the word up to twice more for higher stakes, with the opponents' predictions staying the same on each attempt.
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