If you have any issues please contact tech support at registering or logging in you agree to give MysticArt Pictures right to contact you. Overall, an average game for an average show - try it only if you're a trivia buff who's already played everything else.Thank you for registering with MysticArt Pictures. ![]() The graphics, in extended EGA mode, is below-average, and the trivia questions get old quickly because there is only a few categories (which you can't select, unlike Jeopardy!. The computer version of Wipeout is at best only a time waster for those few minutes away from Jeopardy!. Like one of the famous pricing games in The Price is Right, the contestant can hit a button to make the computer reveal how many correct answers they have until either they run out of time or they have found all six. In a pleasantly fun end game, the finalist has to select 6 correct answers from the 12 options offered within 60 seconds. Winning two frames gets you through to the final. Hitting a wipeout allows your opponent to steal the frame if they can find just one correct answer. From 12 options, players bid on how many correct answers they can pick out (up to the maximum of 8). The two contestants with the most money at the end of round 1 go to play in the Wipeout Auction. The other five answers are incorrect, and hitting a "Wipeout" loses all your money from the whole game (ouch). In this trivia game, a screen of sixteen possible answers (to a question such as "Which of these inventions were discovered by accident?") are shown - eleven are correct, the first awarding $10, then $20, etc. ![]() ![]() Wipeout is one of the most obscure Softie games ever, based on an equally obscure trivia game that managed to have an UK version despite lackluster ratings in the US.
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