The hostess wore a bikini, and trilons were still used. After a hiatus that began sometime in , it returned in September In a rare move, Frederic Meisner and Peter Bond alternated hosting duties from week to week, with Maren Gilzer as hostess. Notably, by around late , the show ran daily, including weekends, and this schedule remained until Germany's version is one of several to have used similar aspects of an American Wheel layout: when the show premiered, it used the nighttime Round 1 layout albeit reversed for all three rounds on a rainbow-esque Wheel, with shopping after each round.
Vowels were DM From around until around the end of , a Super Puzzle was played after round 3. Five words were arranged in a crossword-type fashion, each with a different category. The first two contestants each chose two consonants while the third chose one consonant and one vowel.
The six letters chosen would appear, and the contestants had 90 seconds to solve all five words, 30 for each player it is known that, on at least some episodes, even if it wasn't their turn to solve, players were allowed to help.
If all five words were solved, the players won a cash jackpot, split equally among the three. The amount in the jackpot was originally determined by the total of what all three players won during the main game; later in the run starting around or so , the jackpot started at DM 10, and grew by that much every episode until it was won. In , Parker Brothers released three board game adaptions two regular editions and one Junior.
All three editions, including the Junior, used the layout used in Pressman's regular and Deluxe editions in the s. In late , the trio did a behind-the-scenes special while at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida about the American Wheel' s "Around the World" tapings of Season 9, which had quite a few other international hosts and hostesses present as well.
Originally in the Bonus Round, contestants selected five consonants and a vowel. Until , solving the puzzle won a set prize. From to , the player played for one of three prizes by choosing one of three envelopes. In mid-May , the show moved to Kabel Eins, with production moving from Berlin to Munich with the move came a new set and new wheel.
Bond and Gilzer left when the show moved; at this point, Meisner took over presenting full-time, while Gilzer was replaced by Sonja Kraus. Around this time, shopping was also streamlined; instead of purchasing prizes shown in studio, the prizes available to purchase were now shown on a video wall at center stage. An in-studio audience, which had been shown on camera for most of the Sat. The puzzleboard was replaced by an electronic one on May 10, Toward the end of , significant changes were made to the show, partly as a result of Germany's change to the euro.
The show's ratings suffered during this period, and the show ended on October 31, with the final episode of a tournament bringing back the show's biggest winners of The puzzle board reverted back to using trilons, the only known adaption of Wheel to go this route.
The player then chose four consonants and a vowel. In a rarity for the franchise, there was no letter-turner the puzzle board was entirely electronic or Bankrupt wedges.
Only a single round was played with values ranging from 50 to 1, marks, two Extra Dreh spaces each just three spaces away from the other, one Aussetzen, and one Sonderpreis , and the team who solved the puzzle went on to the Bonus Round.
Eventually, the Wheel values became 1 to 9 points with two Aussetzen spaces opposite each other, no Extra Dreh spaces, and one Sonderpreis space and the number of rounds increased from one to three. The show aired about once a month for minutes, all live; the hosts were the same as the regular series, with Gundis Zambo alternating with Gilzer at the puzzle board. For at least one point in time, if not through its entire run, Greece's Speed-Up Round had one major difference from most other versions.
Instead of one letter per turn, contestants kept the turn as long as they continued to call correct letters. From about , to celebrate its 3rd Anniversary, the show changed its opening to a localized version of the American one, complete with that remix of "Changing Keys".
The wheel had no Lose a Turn wedges at a point; only Bankrupt. A Bankrupt, however, wiped out the entire score from the start, not just the current round score. Vowels cost 20, drachmas and the bonus for solving a puzzle from 50, to , drachmas by In later years, Bankrupt only wiped out that player's bank for that round and the winner of each round also kept their winnings for that round in addition to 50, drachmas.
The second round featured a jackpot space and the jackpot started at , drachmas and increased with each amount spun. The winner chose one of six envelopes and then chose four consonants and a vowel before solving the puzzle within. By , the player chose one of three round envelopes. The show returned on Star on March 23, This is the first version outside the United States to use the Express wedge used in Round 3 only , although under a different name: All or Nothing.
It also uses the Cavern wedge used on France's version under the name Gift introduced in Round 2. If the limit is not exceeded, the player must solve that round's puzzle without going Bankrupt in order to keep the prizes.
The gameplay structure is very similar to the American version only there is no house minimum and nothing is added to the final spin. Bankrupts now act like their American counterparts.
The original series' Wheel used 23 wedges, with three pegs each. The series, in its three runs, has gone through several personnel changes. Also, the surname is listed first per customs of the Hungarian language.
In at least one episode, Hungary tried a unique concept by filling the entire puzzle board with what at first would look like a series of random letters. The objective was to choose letters that were not in the puzzle.
The letters that were in the puzzle were presumably in order yet with spaces between them regardless of whether or not they were in the same word.
For at least part of its run, the show used the same crossword game played on the German show; the three contestants chose 2 letters each, and after all were revealed they had 90 seconds to solve it. If successful, they split a cash jackpot. Surf Wheel of Fortune so called because it was sponsored by Surf, a brand of detergent existed in India from to Their intro consisted of a shot of the puzzle board, a computerized slot machine and a computerized Wheel layout with the special spaces spelled out vertically in English.
The original hostess, "Vicky", was replaced on May 1 by "Ike". Originally, the show aired daily at PM , but on November 5 moved to until February 4, when it returned to On May 6, the show moved to its final timeslot of , where it remained until its demise. The series appears to have ended out of controversy; according to Sirait , some deception of the public was involved. Revivals The series was revived on antv from to July 29, , followed by a very brief revival on Indosiar from January 2-March 3, Another revival was planned for MBC 4 to begin in December or January , although it appears that these plans fell through.
Strangely, at least the revival has the set reversed Wheel at left, puzzle board at right. Even stranger is that the revival's Wheel has just one arrow, positioned in front of the host. The differs from the original set, which used the traditional three arrow podium setup, but with a color sequence of blue, red, yellow.
La Ruota Della Fortuna debuted in as one of several games played on Pentatlon , which aired on Canale 5 and was hosted by Mike Bongiorno. The Wheel used on this version had only 15 wedges. France followed suit with their own version of Pentatlon , which aired for four months in as Pentathlon.
The original pilot used an automated Wheel, with players stopping it via a button in front of them similar to the Shopper's Bazaar pilot ; these buttons were covered with boxes when the show went to series. Beginning in specifically, on a "redemption episode" , each contestant was given one spin to begin the round. This version was half gameplay, half something else most likely a comedy show. Parole d'oro What could be best described as a knockoff, "Golden Words" aired on Sundays during the season at PM, ending due to low ratings.
Players who landed on a letter could take the letter for , lire per appearance or pass their turn, as a wrong letter cost that player , lire. Negative scoring is known to have occurred.
Landing on a letter that was already attempted to be put in whether in the puzzle or not was an automatic pass unless the player had any Joker tokens which were supplied at the beginning of the game left. Some letters on the Wheel were gold, and hence were worth 1,, lire per appearance. Landing on the Wild space or using a Joker token allowed that player to choose a letter. Choosing a letter that was golden still awarded 1,, per appearance. Once a puzzle was solved, all players won what was on their display, with the person who solved receiving an additional 5,, lire.
The Bonus Round allowed the player to choose five letters, albeit picked at random from a bag. The player then had sixty seconds to solve the puzzle but was presumably allowed only one guess at the solution.
Guessing correctly doubled his or her winnings. Interestingly, audience coaching similar to that on The Price Is Right was allowed in the main round although it was not in the Bonus Round. On this version, the Free Spin was called "Jolly" and used a picture of a jester. Originally, the Jolly was a disc with a J on it, but this appears to have been changed because the wedge it was on said "JOO". By the end of the run, the Toss-Up awarded a Free Spin. This version was one of the few to try Wheel in an hour-long format; unlike in America, the show played at least nine rounds.
The "warm-up lap" used on Pentatlon was dropped after the first few seasons. Round 3 was the Prize Puzzle, which was awarded only if the player could answer a "bonus" question. Round 8 added the "Golden Letter", which when called began a short minigame: Bongiorno named a category, after which the contestant had to name a certain number of things that both fit the category and began with the Golden Letter; success doubled that player's score, but failure was essentially Bankrupt.
The final round increased all cash values and added a Vowel wedge, which essentially acted like Free Vowel did in the Shopper's Bazaar pilot. Aside from Carrasi briefly returning in , Ruota remained stable until Barale left in She was originally replaced by Roberta Capula, who in turn was quickly replaced by Antonella Elia, who herself was replaced in by Claudia Grego; after Grego departed in , Ana Laura Ribas briefly held the role and was replaced by Miriana Trevisan.
At this point, the show returned to stability until , when Trevisan was replaced by Nancy Comelli until the show's demise. In , the trademark "Gira la Ruota Spin the Wheel " theme was introduced. Interestingly, the music shows some resemblance to the American "I'm a Wheel Watcher" song and in fact may have been inspired by it.
Also, from , unlike most other adaptions, a fourth arrow was seen in front of Bongiorno's hosting area, although this was presumably used only to determine the Speed-Up value. When not in use, it was rotated 90 degress counterclockwise. By , an electronic puzzle board was introduced. It was different from most others because in the case of multiple occurrences of a letter, the hostess only needed to touch one to reveal the others. The theme music was a dance remix of the "Gira la Ruota" song.
The set and Wheel layout were similar to France's version only the set was mirrored and the Wheel used a different font. The puzzle board also used a bold font and did not have a border that signified whose player's turn it was the border was always a magenta-red color. Intially, contestants played for a top prize of Before came to an end, the top prize was halved. The first, released in , used the Round 1 layout in the Odeon version. The rest of Milton Bradley's releases used a layout with a similar style to that used on the show.
In , Clementoni released a home adaption of the most recent version. It had a puzzle board which was designed to use custom puzzles as well as puzzles provided on cards and even had a cardboard cutout figure of Silvstedt that could be attached to the side. It is also believed to have aired on TV3. The first toss-up puzzle earned 1, denari, but the solver of the 2,denari puzzle started the first round and the solver of the 3,denari toss-up started round 4. Each vowel cost denari.
After spinning a smaller wheel full of envelopes, the winner would be given six free letters and then chose four more letters and must solve within 10 seconds in order to win the prize described in the envelope. Roda Impian was another success for the franchise, airing on Astro Ria from ; original host Halim Othman was replaced by Hani Mohsin in This version uses some sounds from the US one, such as buzzer and Final Spin bells.
The show ended out of respect for Mohsin, who had died suddenly of a heart attack in RM was placed counterclockwise of Hilang Giliran in Round 1 while the top values for Rounds 2 to 4 were placed counterclockwise of Muflis.
A Prize wedge was added on the other side of the top value for Rounds 2 and 3. In Round 4, a second Prize wedge was added. Vowels cost 50 ringgit. The bonus round featured four grand prizes in four envelopes represented by the letters R, O, D, and A. After being given N, K, R, M, G, and A, the player chose three consonants and a vowel and must solve within 10 seconds.
Despite the program's demise in Malaysia, the original Roda Impian remains the longest-running and most-watched game show in the country. The opening was a localized version of the American one, and the show used two puzzle boards. As opposed to 24, the Wheel had 25 wedges, each with three pegs.
Before the show's run ended, the N was omitted from the Wheel. After the N was ommitted, peso symbols on some of the Wheel values were noticably displayed upside-down. As opposed to having a final spin of the game, a final spin of the round was done if a round was taking too long. In the bonus round, the player chose one of six envelopes and after being given the letters E, N, R, and S chose three more consonants and a vowel and must solve the puzzle within 10 seconds.
The show is virtually identical to the modern Romanian show see below. This version uses the new music cues just like the US version. Despite its longevity, it is unknown if the show still airs. Het Rad van Fortuin , originally hosted by Hans van der Togt, ran on RTL 4 from and at one point used a localized version of the American opening. For the first few years, this version was very similar to Belgium's version at the time, including similar Wheel layouts, and even the same music and sound effects.
Each vowel cost guilders. In fact, the first few episodes were taped on Belgium's set. This version used the shopping format. The winner chose five consonants and a vowel and must solve the bonus puzzle within 15 seconds to win a car or a kitchen. By , the player chose one of three envelopes.
The show was briefly revived in for four episodes, with Carlo Boszhard who also hosted that country's version of The Price Is Right as host, and Borsato returning to the puzzle board. In the bonus round, the player spun a wheel with 12 envelopes.
After being given R, S, T, and E, the player chose three more consonants and another vowel and must solve within 10 seconds. Interestingly, the base layout has no non-cash spaces apart from one Bankroet a second is added in Round 2. When the wheel spins, a melody plays along which the contestants can guess 'during the spin' of what song the melody plays to. Verliesbeurt wedge can be placed on any orange space except the euro space. Some sources indicate that there can be one, two, or none of these at one time.
A Joker Free Spin space can be placed on any yellow space. When landed on a Joker, the wedge is awarded and the contestant plays for the amount underneath similar to the rules for Prize wedges and Free Spin on the American version until Finally, a Publieksprijs Audience Award can be placed on any blue space. When this is landed on, each member in the audience receives a prize to go home with. It is not until the timer starts that the letters themselves are revealed.
After that, the contestant has only ten seconds to solve the puzzle correctly. The name of the program was shortened to Het Rad and the startingune was taken care of by Regi. There is also no permanent assistant at the letter board, in each episode there is a BV guest as "typewriter". The first episode aired on August 3 and reached , viewers. At the end of December , VIER broadcast a second series that scored significantly less than the first series with an average of , viewers.
From January , a special episode of Het Rad will be shown on screen every week and will be played with duos. The first episode of this weekly edition, with BV's playing for charity, reached almost , viewers. Whomever wins the second round spends their winnings on prizes. After three more toss-ups, a second Bankroet, a bonus prize wedge and a "mispoes" wedge gag prize and loss of turn would be placed on the wheel.
The jackpot starts at 0 and each correct letter adds the amount earned to said jackpot. The bonus round would be played exactly as America's post format with a prize inside each of the 24 envelopes.
This version based itself heavily on the Australian one, with a very similar set and rules. One infamous episode which appears from time to time in blooper specials was boxer David Tua's game on October 10, at one point, he asked for P when buying a vowel; at another, he tried to buy a "constonant".
He was also believed to have tried to call "O for awesome", but in fact it was "O for Olsen" a reference to Olsen Filipaina , although the main problem is that he was supposed to call a consonant. Croner released a board game that was the same as the games released in Australia with the sole difference possibly apart from puzzles being the boxart, which featured Leishman and New Zealand's puzzle board.
In addition to using categories most of which appeared to be identical to the American and Australian versions , Sonia offered a clue pertaining to each puzzle at the start of every round similarly to the American pilots. Unlike the American version, consonants still rewarded the amount spun at a flat rate.
Wheel ended in June due to low ratings, low advertiser revenue, and high production costs; an increased emphasis on the play-by-phone game "Speed Digits" where Gray gave RSTLNE and Gunn gave a sixth consonant is likely to have been a contributing factor, as it typically disrupted the game flow. The week of April 27, had firefighters playing the game; while not stated outright, all of them were male, likely in an attempt to draw a large female demographic.
Lykkehjulet aired from 13 March to 16 April on TV3 and is the same as the original Swedish Lyckohjulet , with one contestant from Norway and two from Sweden or vice versa playing against each other and as a result of the dual-country airing, intros and promos used two logos.
This is the only known version of Wheel to have contestants from different countries playing against each other as a regular part of the format Canadians have played on the American version, and at least one American played on the Australian version.
For a while, the format was similar to the American hour-long version. The first set consisted of two Swedish players while the second consisted of two Norwegian players. For each set of players, two regular rounds were played. The top winner from each set played a duel round, which was similar to the Bonus Round only with two players. The winner of the duel round would play the Bonus Round.
If neither player won the duel round, however, no Bonus Round was played. This is the only known time a version in the worldwide franchise to regularly depart from the standard three-player format. Originally, the show was hosted by Ragnar Otnes and Ulrika Nilsson.
During the two-player era, a Bonus token which worked similar to the Prize wedge was placed on the sole space in the second round of each set. The Wheel is believed to have offered both krones and kronas, which are the currencies of Norway and Sweden respectively, as both currencies are similar in name and value.
Initially, a shopping-based turntable was at center stage, which appears to have been dropped when Knut became host. A board game adaption was released in both countries, which was modeled after Waddington's British version. Damm released the game in Norway while Karnan released the game in Sweden. The main difference was the Wheel layout. Finally, some of the special spaces were named differently between both versions. For example, Sweden's uses the show's Bankrutt as the name for their Bankrupt wedge while Norway's uses the term Konkurs.
There also appears to have been a one-time special that aired in Norway only on February 26, It was revived on Canal 13 on June 9, , hosted by Jorge Ortega, but appears to have ended in It appears to have ended in The logo was the American one used from When the show premiered in , the values were , , , , , , , , , , 2,, 3,, and 4, notably being between Lose A Turn and Bankrupt ; by , the amounts on the Wheel became 1,, 1,, 1,, 1,, 1,, 2,, 2,, 2,, 2,, 3,, 3,, 3,, 3,, and 4, still between Lose A Turn and Bankrupt although the penalty wedges around it swapped positions.
Vowels cost pesos. The Speed-Up was played like the American version, with consonants worth the Final Spin's amount plus 1, pesos. The Monday through Friday shows were daily shows looking for the top three scores; those three would go to the weekly final on Saturday to play for , pesos worth of prizes. The top three scores from the weekly scores would then go on to the monthly finals, where the eventually winner got a brand new car on top of everything else they won.
This version closely resembled the American format then in use, albeit with puzzles in both English and Tagalog, and K replacing R in the Bonus Round. The Bonus Round prizes were: cars and cash amounts ranging from 50, pesos to 1,, pesos and a top prize of 2,, pesos. The most notable difference was the Power wedge known as "Hold Up" in other versions that use it which, after calling a correct letter, allowed a player to steal all current round winnings from an opponent.
If neither opponent had any money, the player still had to call a correct letter at no value. Another notable difference was the position of each of the player's arrows.
Instead of being placed at the center of each player's podium, they were placed just clockwise of the center. The reason for this is unknown.
The peso amounts on the Wheel were 3,, 5,, 6,, 7,, 8,, 9,, 10,, and 15, Vowels cost 2, pesos. A Free Spin token styled just like the US version's only shaped like an oval was present on the purple 6,, and obtaining it also added 6, pesos per letter to that player's score. There was no house minimum, but it was implied that the contestants were given parting gifts. Unlike the original run, the series ended with a proper finale: a special game with adult-child teams.
The use of a four-round structure was unusual, as this version also used the shopping format until sometime in Numerically, Poland's top values from were 5, times as high as the American top dollar values at the time. From , they were half as much as their American counterparts.
The contestant podiums were reversed in color to blue, yellow, and red from left to right. Behind the players were diamond backdrops similar to those of the American version, which were used until at the latest. Bankrupt and Lose A Turn were called "Bankrut" and "Stop" respectively, although the latter was "Strata Kolejki" until sometime in From to , there was a wedge marked "Premia" in Round 1.
Although it translates to "Bonus," it was essentially Free Spin. During a celebrity special for Christmas , the Round 4 Wheel layout was used during the entire game. For a brief time, the graphics were altered to show the chosen envelope's letters and the contestant's picks at the same time along with the second clock, although this was dropped by Spring As contestants navigate high-pressure rounds, they should pay attention to Pat. The host has been known to warn players of technicalities and costly errors, especially when they have a lot of money on the line.
The producers brief each participant on the dos and don'ts before filming begins. Additionally, the cash and prizes can take up to days to process. As great as it would be to walk away with all your prizes and cash, game show winnings are considered income and are taxable.
Due to Wheel of Fortune 's tightly-run schedule, there is plenty of time for reshoots, if needed. According to a former contestant, the show had players reshoot a round in order to get the desired result. Once in the contestant pool, a producer will reach out to schedule the big day. Each individual is called to appear on one of two possible taping dates, meaning they must be available for both dates. Product Reviews. Home Ideas. United States.
Type keyword s to search. Today's Top Stories. The Rise of the Cleanfluencer. Christopher Willard Getty Images. Take that practice spin! Brian Ach Getty Images.
Sorry, no all-expenses-paid trips. Eric McCandless Getty Images. No "ands" about it. Astrid Stawiarz Getty Images. Plan to dress to impress. NBC Getty Images. No phones allowed.
But you are allowed to bring guests. Ralph Notaro Getty Images. No chit-chatting with the audience. But who doesn't want to chat with Pat? You'll be escorted O Canada? More like NO Canada. So is building puzzles for them to solve. We never get tired of solving puzzles at the last second and winning bonus rounds. This is a really fun because you get to solve lots of puzzles With words and you get to compete with other players around the globe and you get money and buy with your fake money tickets to the wheel of fortune game and you can solve big puzzles as you level up.
I love the spin until you miss feature and also the open 5 boxes at a time. And I like being able to continue playing until a new level is created. And I love the new 5 spins to get free diamonds with a 25 diamond bonus. I have been having trouble getting credit for special wheel tournaments. This has happened at least 5 times in the past few days. I may play 8 games and none of them are against the characters. Those were earlier comments.
I have some new concerns. I love playing this game but I do get frustrated sometimes. Very frustrating. The developer, Scopely, Inc. The following data may be used to track you across apps and websites owned by other companies:. The following data may be collected and linked to your identity:. Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More. With Family Sharing set up, up to six family members can use this app.
App Store Preview. Screenshots iPhone iPad. Description It's the best word puzzle game of all time!
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