Battle Stars: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Latest revision as of 14:25, 13 July 2021

Game Show created by Merrill Heatter of The Hollywood Squares fame. Battlestars lasted for six months on NBC from 1981-82, then Uncanceled in 1983 for a few more months.

Battlestars bore a striking resemblance to the Squares, except that it featured only six celebrities who sat in triangles. Each celebrity was surrounded by three numbers. A randomizer selected one of the numbers, which corresponded to whichever celebrity would be asked the question. Also unlike Squares, the questions offered two possible answers. If the same player "captured" all three numbers surrounding a star, he or she then had to "capture" two more in a similar fashion to win $500 and the game.


The following Game Show tropes appear in Battle Stars:
  • Bonus Round: Two.
    • The first was called "Battlestars Two" and obscured a famous person's face under 16 blocks. Three blocks were chosen to reveal the face, and the contestant could then choose up to three more blocks to remove. Getting it with four blocks removed won $5,000, and each block afterward lowered the jackpot.
    • The second used the three celebrities the winner captured. Each was asked a multiple-choice question with three answers given, and the contestant could choose to agree or disagree with each. $500 was awarded for each right answer, and a Progressive Jackpot if all were correct.
  • Personnel:
Tropes used in Battle Stars include:

Charlie Tuna: [Names of the six celebrities], all on The New Battlestars! And here's the man in command, Alex Trebek!