Un Cwestiwn
(Add write-up for series 2. Series 3 begins in September, according to on-screen promo.) |
(→Cwestiwn nesa!: Changes for clarity.) |
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=== Cwestiwn nesa! === | === Cwestiwn nesa! === | ||
- | A second series aired in early 2020, with a few changes. Each contestant | + | A second series aired in early 2020, with a few changes. Each contestant starts with three lives, and if they get three questions wrong before the end of Round Three, they're out of the game entirely. (The rounds are now called Rounds, not Tasks.) |
- | + | One question each in Round One, and lose a life if you get a question wrong. Round Two continues to mix scrambled Welsh words with a memory game, but now adds an Odd Symbol Out question. First six to give a correct answer qualify. | |
Round Three now shows 12 categories to the contestants, with a highlight moving at random between them. When someone wants a category, they can buzz in and claim that question. Only one question per category, once it's been claimed it's gone. First three to give a single correct answer qualify. | Round Three now shows 12 categories to the contestants, with a highlight moving at random between them. When someone wants a category, they can buzz in and claim that question. Only one question per category, once it's been claimed it's gone. First three to give a single correct answer qualify. |
Revision as of 18:02, 10 September 2021
Synopsis
Un Cwestiwn is all about the selection, choosing one contestant out of eight to answer the one prize question.
Four tasks help to narrow down the potential winner. Task One is a single multiple choice question. Buzzers come out for Task Two, alternating memory puzzles and unscrambling Welsh words. We lose a couple of players after this task.
Task Three can be long - to succeed, contestants need to buzz in on a general knowledge question, then pick a category from those on offer and get that question right. With the questions pitched at a good level for contestants around 13 years old, there are plenty of errors to reset the game. Later shows turned some of these category questions to multiple-choice ones, reducing the chance for prolonged errors.
Task Four is played by the last three contestants. Here, the challenge is to add up numbers on the left of the display, and count an item appearing on the right. Add the numbers, and count bananas (but not pencils), for instance.
First to give three correct answers faces the final question. Host Iwan Griffiths introduced the prize question at the start of the show, and has reduced eight possible answers to four. If the contender got their question right in Task One, another incorrect answer is removed. Pick the one right answer to the one question to win one prize, one trophy raising one finger.
The visuals on screen aren't great - we never quite know who is in play, who has qualified for the next task, who has made a mistake. The brief show - 18 minutes from start to finish - allows little time to know the anonymous contestants, and the greatest value is as a test of general knowledge in Welsh.
Cwestiwn nesa!
A second series aired in early 2020, with a few changes. Each contestant starts with three lives, and if they get three questions wrong before the end of Round Three, they're out of the game entirely. (The rounds are now called Rounds, not Tasks.)
One question each in Round One, and lose a life if you get a question wrong. Round Two continues to mix scrambled Welsh words with a memory game, but now adds an Odd Symbol Out question. First six to give a correct answer qualify.
Round Three now shows 12 categories to the contestants, with a highlight moving at random between them. When someone wants a category, they can buzz in and claim that question. Only one question per category, once it's been claimed it's gone. First three to give a single correct answer qualify.
No change to Round Four, still a counting game, and the first to give three correct answers qualifies for the One Question, and potentially the prize.
Trivia
Shown in S4C's "Stwnsh" block of shows for young people.
The title translates as "One Question". "Cwestiwn nesa" translates as "Next question". See, you know more Welsh than you thought.