Limitless Win | |
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Genre | Game show |
Presented by | Ant & Dec |
Country of origin | UK |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 3 |
No. of episodes | 19 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producer | Roger Johnson |
Editor | Jamie Rea |
Running time | 60 minutes (inc. adverts) |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 8 January 2022 – present |
Ant & Dec's Limitless Win [1] is a British game show hosted by Ant & Dec which premiered 8 January 2022 on ITV and the series was created by Hello Dolly Ltd. It is produced by Hello Dolly Ltd and Ant & Dec's Mitre Studios.[2]
Gameplay
Two contestants work together as a team to answer a series of questions whose solutions are all positive integers (whole numbers). In a preliminary round, they must answer as many questions as possible in 60 seconds, earning five "lives" for each correct response and incurring no penalty for a pass or miss. The contestants alternate turns; no conferring is allowed, and a contestant's turn only ends once they give a correct answer. If the team fails to answer any questions correctly, they are immediately dismissed with no winnings.[2]
Examples of questions used in the preliminary round:
- How many odd numbers are there between zero and one hundred? (Answer: 50)
- The London Eye typically takes how many minutes to complete one full rotation? (Answer: 30)
- Which song about partying was Prince's first UK Top 40 hit? (Answer: "1999")
In the main game:
- On 21 June 2021, the longest day of the year, the Shetland Islands experienced the most hours of daylight in the UK. How many hours was that? (Answer: 19)
- The Natural History Museum's Dippy the Dinosaur, which went on a national tour in 2018, is how many metres long in its displayed pose? (Answer: 26)
- How many countries have a land border with Germany? (Answer: 9)
The main game makes use of the "Limitless Ladder," a vertical scale marked off in steps and displaying cash values at each 10th step that increase from bottom to top. The team must use a dial to register their guess on each question, attempting to get as close to the correct answer as possible without going over. They move up the ladder a number of steps equal to their guess, and lose enough lives to match the error between the guess and the correct answer. The hosts warn the team when they have 30 seconds left to give a guess; if they fail to do so before time runs out, the last value they dialed is automatically locked in. If the team makes an error larger than the number of remaining lives or offers a guess above the correct answer, the game ends and they leave with no winnings.[2][3]
One lifeline at a time is made available for the team's use as the game proceeds; each may only be used once.
- More Than: Team may ask if the correct answer is higher than a value of their choice.
- Odd or Even: Team is told whether the correct answer is odd or even.
- Range: Team is shown a range in which the correct answer falls.
- Take Two: Two guesses are allowed, both given by the team (series 1) or one each by the team and hosts (series 2). Only the guess closer to the correct answer is counted.
If the team unlocks a new lifeline while holding an unused one, they may only keep one of the two and must discard the other.
If the team gives an exact guess, they receive five more lives and their bank is increased to match the highest cash value they have reached to that point. They may end the game at any time and keep their banked money, as long as they have not locked in a guess for the current question. The first 12 values displayed on the ladder are £500, £1,000, £2,500, £5,000, £10,000, £20,000, £30,000, £50,000, £75,000, £100,000, £150,000, and £250,000, and every 10 additional steps will increase the prize by a further £250,000. There is no upper limit to the potential top prize.[2]
If the error between the team's guess and the correct answer is exactly large enough to use up all remaining lives, the game moves into a "sudden death" phase. Any inexact guess on the next question ends the game and sends the team home with no money, while an exact one gives them five lives and returns them to normal play.
Reception
Michael Hogan of The Daily Telegraph ran with the headline "Ant & Dec's Limitless Win is the best gameshow since Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?". Michael argued that the programme was Ant & Dec's first new success after a string of previous "flops" (such as PokerFace, Push the Button, the American Wanna Bet? and Red or Black?), and not having been involved in a new format for a decade. He felt that "the game itself was a little fiddly but swept along in its propulsive momentum, viewers soon got the hang of it", and that the format felt "genuinely groundbreaking" in a "crowded" market for game shows.[3]
Jo Anderton of Digital Spy on series 2. Ant & Dec's Limitless Win is coming back and there's a little twist or two on the formula. The biggest of these changes is the change to the Take Two lifeline, which now has Ant and Dec giving their own answer for a potential extra chance at winning. "Our first reaction was, 'No, no, absolutely not, that’s too much pressure.' But then we kind of talked about it and played it a bit and eventually warmed to it and thought, 'Actually, we’re quite good at the game sometimes. This could work!!' https://www.digitalspy.com/tv/a42362326/ant-dec-limitless-win-series-2-change/
Stuart Heritage of The Guardian felt that Limitless Win was essentially Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? with "a few bells and whistles" (such as the idea of a "limitless" prize), and that the show suffered from pacing issues and "gratuitous complications" in its format. However, he praised Ant & Dec's hosting for their "perfectly weighted performance" in conducting the game, easily explaining the rules, and conversing with the contestants, and deemed it to be their "most effective new venture in probably two decades".[4]
Viewership
The series premiered to over 6.3 million viewers, making it ITV's highest-rated non-scripted series premiere since The Masked Singer. With average viewing figures of 4.7 million, it was the highest rated game show of 2022.[2]
Transmissions
Regular
Series | Start date | End date | Episodes |
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1 | 8 January 2022 | 5 February 2022 | 5 |
2 | 25 December 2022 | 4 February 2023 | 6[lower-alpha 1] |
3 | 6 January 2024 | 24 February 2024 | 8 |
It has been announced in 2023 that, apart from series 3, ITV also commissioned series 4.
International versions
On 1 March 2022, it was reported that Endemol Shine North America had acquired the US rights to the format, and was pitching it to local networks.[2]
On 22 August 2022, RTL announced that they commissioned a German version of the show, Ohne Limit, to be produced by Endemol Shine Germany.[5]
Notes
- ↑ The first episode of series two was a Christmas celebrity special. Due to time constraint, the broadcast of one of the games for charity had to be divided in two parts: the game began during a Christmas special and terminated during the first regular episode.
References
- ↑ "Ant and Dec to host new ITV gameshow Fortune Favours the Brave". Radio Times. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 White, Peter (1 March 2022). "UK Game Show 'Limitless Win' heading to the US; Endemol Shine North America takes out hot Ant & Dec series". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
- 1 2 Hogan, Michael (8 January 2022). "Ant & Dec's Limitless Win is the best game show since Who Wants to be a Millionaire?". The Daily Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 30 April 2022.
- ↑ Heritage, Stuart (10 January 2022). "Limitless Win: will Ant and Dec's gameshow drain the entire planet's finances?". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
- ↑ Whittingham, Clive (22 August 2022). "Endemol Shine Germany adapting ITV quiz format Limitless Win for RTL". C21Media.