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Duel (UK game show) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Duel (UK game show)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Duel
Format Quiz show
Presented by Nick Hancock
Country of origin Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 12
Production
Producer(s) Gallowgate
Running time 60 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel ITV
Picture format 16:9
Original run 19 January 20085 April 2008
External links
Official website

Duel was an ITV quiz show based on a format by Francophone production company French TV, hosted by Nick Hancock, broadcast on Saturday evenings from January to April 2008.

Contents

[edit] Format

Each 'Duel' consisted of two players, who each began the game with 10 poker chips, which in turn each have the same monetary value. They were asked multiple-choice general knowledge questions without time limits, each with four possible answers, one of which was correct. The players were asked to select the answer they believed to be correct; if they were unsure, however, they were permitted to cover up to four answers with their chips, to ensure that they had a chip on the right answer when revealed. Once satisfied they had done so, each player was asked to confirm their answer by pressing the 'Lock Down' button, at which point the further placement or removal of chips was halted. Players retained chips placed on correct answers. Each chip placed on a wrong answer was collected by the house and added £1,000 to the rolling jackpot, which began at a base £100,000.

Each player also had two 'Accelerators' (similar to the 'press' in the U.S. version of the show) at their disposal. If used, an Accelerator forced their opponent to answer any given question within seven seconds of it being pressed; when those seven seconds expired, any marked answers were automatically 'locked down'. Players had to 'lock down' before playing an Accelerator, however; doing so before 'locking down' resulted in the immediate sounding of a short harsh error-tone played twice quickly and the accelerator being wasted. If they still had their second accelerator available, Hancock would inform the player that they could still lock down and play the other accelerator if they wish.

At any point in the game, if a player did not cover the correct answer, the 'Duel' was over. If both contestants were wrong on the same question, they were both eliminated.

If a player won their 'Duel', they played again with a new opponent, whom they selected from three candidates.

For the first four shows of the series, after a second consecutive 'Duel' victory, the contestant was presented with two choices: to leave for a cash sum or to play on (entitled Cash or Chips). They were asked to randomly select one of two chips, which, once turned over, were marked "£" - representing a fixed total (worth £10,000 for two 'Duel' victories, £20,000 for three) and "%" - (worth 10% of the rolling jackpot for two 'Duel' victories, 20% of the jackpot for three - although money was never deducted from the jackpot total). The player then decided whether to bail out with the money offered to them or to continue their game, with the potential to increase their winnings should they successfully complete their next 'Duel'. If a contestant elected to leave the game, the two potential opponents who had waited the longest to play were automatically selected for the next Duel.

The rules were then modified (as of show five): after a second consecutive 'Duel' victory, the winning contestant was posed a bonus question via the 'Accelerator' (with seven seconds to respond), and given a further three chips to play with. The fewer chips used meant a higher guaranteed payout: £10,000 for one chip used, £5,000 for two and £2,500 for three. After a third consecutive 'Duel' victory, the rules were the same except that the values were doubled (£20,000 for one chip, and so on). Regardless of answers selected, however, the contestant played another Duel by virtue of having won the previous one. If they didn't cover the correct answer, they played on, but did not win any cash.

Four consecutive 'Duel' victories won a contestant the rolling jackpot. After this, the jackpot was reset to £100,000.

A game was said to be a 'Pure Duel' when both players were down to one chip with no accelerators left. A finished game was also known as a 'Perfect Duel' if an opponent was knocked out losing all ten chips.

[edit] Series 1

Series 1 began transmission on 19 January 2008, and ran in a primetime slot on Saturday evenings.

[edit] Winners/Jackpot Total

Show Date Contestant Duels Won £/% Prize Won Jackpot Total
1 19 January 2008 Matt 2 £ £10,000 £155,000
2 26 January 2008 Donna 2  % £17,000 £206,000
4 9 February 2008 Maurice 2 £ £10,000 £303,000

From show 5 onwards (according to the rule changes outlined above):

Show Date Contestant Duels Won Accelerators Won Prize Won Jackpot Total
5 16 February 2008 Wanda 2 1 £10,000 £332,000
8 8 March 2008 Robert 4 2 £482,500 £470,000
11 29 March 2008 Rob 4 2 £215,000 £190,000
12 5 April 2008 James 4 1 £186,000 £166,000

[edit] Ratings

Source: BARB

Show Date Audience (millions) Viewing Share (%)
1 19 January 2008 3.2 14
2 26 January 2008 2.6 12
3 2 February 2008 2.8 12
4 9 February 2008 2.9 13
5 16 February 2008 3.0 14
6 23 February 2008 3.8 16
7 1 March 2008 3.6 16
8 8 March 2008 4.3 19
9 15 March 2008 3.8 17
10 22 March 2008 3.6 16
11 29 March 2008 3.3 15
12 5 April 2008 3.6 16

[edit] Duel Jackpot Winners

The first ever Duel jackpot winner was Robert, a social worker, who correctly identified that the US Masters is the only golf tournament to be held at the same venue each year. He won the £470,000 jackpot that had built up since the start of the series, and also took home his accumulated accelerator wins of £12,500, giving him a total of £482,500.

On 29th March 2008, the jackpot was won for the second time by university lecturer Rob, scooping £215,000 (£190,000 jackpot plus £25,000 accumulated accelerator wins).

A week later, on the final show of the series, firefighter James won the third Duel jackpot of £166,000, plus his accelerator win of £20,000; a total of £186,000.

[edit] Notes

The show was Gallowgate Productions' second television quiz, having produced PokerFace in 2006 and 2007.

The music for the UK version of the show was composed by Paul Farrer, composer on The Weakest Link and Dancing on Ice.

[edit] International versions

ITV were the first network to purchase the rights to Duel in September 2007, swiftly followed by ABC in the U.S., who launched their first series of the show, hosted by sport broadcaster Mike Greenberg, on 17 December 2007.

The Duel format has been optioned by television networks in Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Germany, Hungary, Indonesia, Italy, Mexico, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal and Spain.[1]

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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