Decimate

Contents

Host

Shane Richie

Broadcast

CPL Productions for BBC One, 20 April to 9 October 2015 (50 episodes in 2 series)

Synopsis

Teams defend £20,000 through questions in front of a large wall of lights.

Decimate is played by teams of three players. At the start, the video wall is filled with thousands of golden lights, each representing some money. The players' aim is to hold on to as much of that loot as they can; perfect play will let them take home £20,000. The prize money is split into ten equal segments, initially each is worth £2000.

Before round one, the team is shown ten "key words", they'll appear in the questions. One of the team emerges to play the round, either through volunteering or being told "you do it". The other members get twenty seconds to talk about the "key words".

Decimate Some key words give more information than others.

The chosen player joins Shane Richie in the middle of the stage. The other two players sit on the subs' bench, with nothing more than a large buzzer for company. Shane asks a question, and gives three possible answers. The contender thinks about the three possible answers, and thinks out loud.

A correct answer defends the money in that segment. An incorrect answer loses that segment from the game. After a round ends, any gaps are filled by levelling the other segments. So if a team gets three wrong in the opening round, they've £14,000 left, and round two questions will be for £1400.

Right answers are marked by a musical chord, pleasant and immemorable. Wrong answers are heralded by a big deep voice booming "DECIMATE!" in an ominous fashion, before the money drains from the video wall. The big deep voice o'doom is provided by format creator Hugh Rycroft.

Decimate The money falls away as we watch.

Five times in the whole show, the subs' bench can push a buzzer and over-rule the player in the middle. The original answer is tossed out, and replaced by the one picked by the pair of players. Should the player in the middle be completely stumped, he can pass the question back to the substitutes, again this happens just five times in the whole game.

The final round is a speed challenge. Again, the players are shown ten "keywords" (categories). They'll be asked up to three questions in each category, each question is meant to be easier than the last. Get any question right and the money is safe, the player moves on to the next category. They need to get something right in all ten segments in the time to win the money.

Fail on all three questions, the money is lost and the player must stop. Not only have they lost 10% of their money, but they've lost 20% of their time. Should all three players fail on the run, the team leaves with nothing.

The bulk of the game play is three rounds, played at about one question per minute, and for diminishing amounts of money. The final round is hard: wins are rare, but those rare wins are for several thousands of pounds.

Decimate So far, not too bad.

There is a good show nestling within Decimate, but it's so painfully slow. Some have argued that the mechanism used on Decimate - "here's some money, defend it through being brilliant" - works less well than "you start with nothing and get rewards".

Theme Music

Nick Norton-Smith and David Roper are credited for "Music".

Trivia

Teams on Decimate have applied as a team, they're relatives or work colleagues or have another connection.

Earth London devised the show's graphics. The wall projection was done by Creative Technology.

Inventor

Hugh Rycroft, who was also one of the show's executive producers.

Web links

BBC programme page

Wikipedia entry

@DecimateCPL

See also

Weaver's Week review

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