PLAY 80s and 90s PC CLASSICS ON WINDOWS 11, 10, 8, 7, VISTA, XP & MACINTOSH OSX
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WHO WANTS TO BE A MILLIONAIRE 2000 1ST EDITION +1Clk Windows 11 10 8 7 Vista XP Install

WHO WANTS TO BE A MILLIONAIRE 2000 1ST EDITION +1Clk Windows 11 10 8 7 Vista XP Install

$ 19.95


Actual Game 

 

Who Wants to be
a Millionaire
2000 1st Edition

1-Click Install
Windows 11, 10, 8, 7, Vista, XP

(Eidos 2000)

MY PROMISE
My games are genuine, install in one step, look, sound and play in Windows 11, 10, 8, 7, Vista and XP like they did in the old days, or your money back. This is my unconditional guarantee for three years.

WHAT IS INCLUDED
This listing includes the original game CD. The box is pictured for reference and is not included.

I will also provide a compatibility CD that will allow the game to run under ALL VERSIONS of Windows 11, 10, 8, 7, Vista and XP, both 32 and 64 bit. Note that is the first edition of the game from 2000. It is NOT the second edition or the 2020 remake.

INSTALLATION
One step: Insert my CD and the game will automatically work on your computer. Done. Yes, it's that simple.

Want to play? Click the icon. Want the game off your computer? Click Uninstall. Zero hassle.

TECH SUPPORT
Rapid response technical support for three years is always an e-mail or phone call away.

In the extremely rare event I cannot get this title to work on your system I will take it back for a full refund. All I ask is minimal assistance from you during the troubleshooting process.

 

The Game
The game excels with easily mastered gameplay and adds some of the design qualities of the developer's signature product, the much better You Don't Know Jack. Each aspect of the show is re-created in the computer game in some fashion. In single-player mode, you go right into the Hot Seat, where you must ascend a ladder of 15 multiple-choice trivia questions to win. Reaching the one thousand and thirty-two thousand dollar milestones guarantees you will win at least that much if you lose later.

When you feel stumped, you have three "lifelines" to use throughout the climb. The 50/50 option removes two of the three wrong answers to a question. You can ask to poll the audience, which gives you the actual results taken from a sample group for each question. The most impressive re-creation is the phone-a-friend lifeline, in which Regis calls one of his friends, who then struggles to offer a suggestion that may or may not be right.

Jellyvision and Disney evidently invested the necessary resources to give the game as much of the TV feel as possible. While Regis doesn't actually read off all of the questions, he does offer the color commentary about where you are on the ladder and banters with the phone-a-friend character. Even after many hours of play, there still wasn't any tedious redundancy in his comments, and the question database seemed sufficiently deep to avoid frequent repeats.

With years of You Don't Know Jack experience under their belts, the Jellyvision designers know how important a smooth audio-visual experience is to keeping a simple game interesting. In addition to the melodramatic music, the questions - which pop in and out, causing the screen to rearrange itself - are animated well. The questions are noticeably more media and pop-culture-related than those in the TV version, suggesting that Jellyvision may have been dipping into the You Don't Know Jack database.

As it stands, Who Wants to be a Millionaire is both a faithful and entertaining simulation of the TV show. It's definitely the game for those who want to see how well they would do in the infamous Hot Seat. It may also be the best way to permanently shut up that irritating, know-it-all family member who barks out the answers to all of the questions whenever the show is on TV. 


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