Decimate (game show)

Decimate
Genre Quiz show
Presented by Shane Richie
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 10 (as of 1 May 2015)
Production
Running time 45 minutes
Production company(s) CPL Productions
Broadcast
Original channel BBC One
Picture format 16:9
Original run 20 April 2015 – present

Decimate is a BBC quiz show that aired BBC One since 20 April 2015 and is hosted by Shane Richie.

Background

The show was commissioned in summer 2014 and was produced by Hugh Rycroft, who had previously produced Tipping Point for ITV. It was developed by CPL Productions, and is the second of two 25 episode series of new game shows to the slot; the first in that slot had been The Edge. A Spanish version of the show was produced by Spanish production company Veralia,[1] and Shine France picked up the rights to remake the show in France.[2]

Gameplay

In each episode, a team of three contestants with a pre-existing relationship can win up to £20,000 by answering a series of questions correctly and keeping as much money in play as possible held by ten sections of a "golden wall".[3]

In round one, Richie gives the team ten keywords, one per question, and one member of the team is chosen to play. That contestant is then briefed by their teammates on what those keywords mean for twenty sections, and is asked ten multiple-choice questions, each with three possible answers. To aid the contestants, five passbacks and five overrides are given to the contestant; these are to last the first three rounds. If the contestant gets the answer correct, that section of the wall is lit up, but if isn't, then that section of the wall is decimated; every wrong answer decimates their bank by £2,000.[3]

In round two, the remaining money from the first round is split evenly into the ten possibly shorter sections and one of the remaining team members is chosen to play. For example, if one section had been decimated, each section would be worth £1,800, if two sections had been decimated each section would be worth £1,600 and so on.[3]

In round three, as before, the remaining money from the second round is divided equally among the ten sections and the last remaining team member plays. Any overrides and passbacks not used in this round are wasted and are of no use to the player in the final round.[3]

In the final round, one player is nominated to answer questions for the team. Like in the previous three rounds, ten keywords are given before the player is selected. There are three questions for each keyword, and if one keyword completely stumps that player, the prize fund is decimated, the clock is stopped and that player has to sit back down and another player steps up. If all three contestants are 'defeated' in this manner, the team leaves with nothing. The team have two minutes to win their bank by answering ten questions correctly. If they succeed, they win their bank. If they fail, they leave with nothing.[3]

Critical reception

Steve Finan of SundayPost.com praised the show for upholding the true meaning of the word 'decimate', which is to reduce by one tenth and is of Latin origin; in Roman times a 'decimatio' was a punishment.[4] Finan wrote that the word had "been suffering a lingering death" as a synonym for "damage, devastate, or ... destroy", leaving a "poorer" vocabulary with no word to "express a reduction of one in ten".[4] Finan stated that he was "indebted" to the show's host for restoring the word's Roman use and called him a "swashbuckling warrior on the side of the grammatical good guys".[4]

Ian K of the Carrick Gazette said that the show "was pleasant enough viewing, but it seemed to me to be one which lacked that ‘something special’ that really successful quiz shows have".[5] In addition, Hayden Woolley gave the show a mixed review; while he commended the choice of host, he scathed over the complexity of the game and the slow pace of the game, facetiously noting how overpowering the wall was and giving an overall review of 3/5.[6]

References

External links