

Brandon Zeigafuse (bmhedgehog) (Australian Version)īE IT KNOWN THAT Press Your Luck and Whammy! are the properties of Fremantle.Jeff Pfeifer (Demo Board, Neon Demo Board, All Cash Bonus Board, GameTek PYL).Jim Balcerek (Demo Board, Neon Demo Board).Layout inspired by Jason Wuthrich's Board Configuration Page at Game Show WarehouseĬorrections and additional information provided by: Jim Balcerek's PYL Board Changes page, originally hosted at Jim's PYL Slides

Get updated losing a Whammy may be more attractive. Two prizes again, similar to April-June, 1984. In a break from tradition, the prize in moves to ,.The same Whammies take their spots on this board, except.Board value is 79% larger, not as much as R1.Eight extra spins, compared to four in the '80s.Must have liked the Big Tongue Whammy, as he appears.Huge increase in the board's total - almost 165%!.Show Marathon shows what the board might have been like had While not an "official" episode by my definition, CBS's Game Note also the "new" directional spaces (no more choices). Spins and landed on "X" went down to 3 spins, while a player withĢe/2p went down to 1e/1p. When hit, a player lost one earned spin (not counting Whammy had been replaced by a "Lose One Spin" (marked with a "Big Bucks" was symbolized by a red sphere. Two different Whammy poses (which didn't match up with the real Spaces had red arrows, prize icons didn't change, and there were Ground colors matched the PC's default (usually blue). In 1988, GameTek released a PC version of the game. Guess puts a prize here - see R2 for my reasoning. *Due to the brightness in the board, is difficult to read. Note the use of Lose-1-Whammy or $200+S early on in. In general, much lower values on this version (such as $30!). With that in mind, please consider that the information shown here Show any R1 gameplay it's assumed they used the intro board. Shown during a Australian game show retrospective. The source for these two boards come from a short video clip
