Lingo (Quebec game show)

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Lingo was a Quebec game show that ran for 439 episodes on Radio-Canada, from around 1998 to around 2001. It was hosted by longtime actor and radio/TV host Paul Houde. It was based on the American version of the show. Two teams of two players compete.

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[edit] Main game

The object of the game is the score the most points in order to win the match. The team gets five guesses at a mystery five-letter word puzzle. If at any time they make a mistake, such as taking too long at a guess, misspelling a word, spelling a word that doesn't exist, spelling a word that is not five letters in length, repeats a word already guessed, or the word does not start with the established first letter, control passes over to the other team and is given a free letter unless only one space is missing. The team that guesses the correct word will receive 50 points.

[edit] Lingo board

At the start of the match, both teams receive a Lingo board, with Team 1 playing with even numbers and Team 2 playing with odd numbers. 8 numbers are marked off each of their boards. Once a team guesses the right word, they get the chance to pull two numbers (one per player) out of a hopper. Once they complete their Lingo board, by getting 5 in a row across, up or down, or diagonally, they get 100 points. If however they pull a black ball out, they lose their turn and control passes over to the other side. (The black ball is called in French "L'infâme boule noire!", which translates to "infamous black ball".)

[edit] End of match

At some point during the match, a bell will go off, signifying the match will end after the current puzzle in play. After the puzzle is solved and two balls pulled out, the team with the most points become the day's champions and goes on to the "No Lingo" game. (The match will also end when either: (A) a team solves the puzzle but cannot make a Lingo as a new board requires Lingo to be made in as few as 3 pulls, or (B) when nobody solves the puzzle.) Both teams get their winning score converted from points to dollars. The runners-up receive a consolation prize.

[edit] Tiebreaker

If the match ends in a tie, another five-letter puzzle will be played with the teams alternating lines until one of them correctly guesses the word and wins the match.

[edit] No Lingo

The champions get to play the "No Lingo" game in which they are presented with a new Lingo board with 12 numbers marked off. Before the first puzzle, they are guaranteed $50 regardless of what happens afterwards. That $50 is doubled to $100 for the first puzzle. Puzzles in this part of the game contained 2 letters, the first letter of the word and a second letter somewhere else in the word. Each line used adds a Lingo ball to be drawn. If they fail to guess the word after the fifth line, they have to draw 6 balls (1 per each line plus an additional penalty ball because they completely missed the word). Once they make the required number of draws without getting Lingo, or getting a gold ball (known in French as "boule d'or") at any time (which ends that round of draws, but the ball goes back in the hopper for a future draw), they are given the option to take the $100 and quit, or continue on and play for double, going through the same procedure as before, right on up to the $1600 level. Should they avoid getting a Lingo at this point, they will return the next day to defend their championship. If there is any time left in the show, a "sprint" game for $100 a word will be played with only the first letter of each puzzle showing. However, if they do get a Lingo, they lose all the money they accumulated and go all the way back to $50, and then play the "sprint" game to build up as much money as possible until show's end. Also, by virtue of getting a Lingo here, they are retired as champions and two new teams compete the next day.

[edit] Notes

  • Champions can stay on the show until they get a Lingo in the end game, or are defeated by their opponents in the main game.
  • This particular version of Lingo ended at around the time when Game Show Network commissioned a new version in English with Chuck Woolery as host, with this Quebecois version's main game rules (points) as the basis of its rules.
  • The most any one team managed to win was about $10,000 (give or take a few hundred dollars).
  • A few changes in the main game later in the run saw the addition of wild card balls that corresponded to the team's colors (green ball for the green team, red ball for the red team). When drawn, they can take any number off the Lingo board, giving them a better shot at completing their card. (The current GSN version has a similar rule with question-mark balls).
  • Black balls in this version were red on the current GSN edition (which were called "stoppers", perhaps owing to a previous Woolery-hosted series, Scrabble).
  • At one time, the completely gold ball used in the end game became a regular blue ball with a gold star.
  • The dictionary used most often in the entire run was Le Petit Robert, which is a French-language dictionary.
  • The judge's first name, seen on occasion for much of the run, was Roger (pronounced similar to that of "Roget's Thesaurus").

[edit] External link