Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Ruck Zuck (game show)

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Composer(s)
  
Ray Ellis Marc Ellis

Production company(s)
  
Reg Grundy Productions

Final episode date
  
20 October 2000

5.8/10
IMDb

Camera setup
  
Multi-Camera

First episode date
  
11 January 1988

Genre
  
Game show

Ruck Zuck (game show) httpsiytimgcomviIqfgy4JdnAMhqdefaultjpg

Original network
  
Tele 5 (1988-1992, 2004-2005) RTL II (1993-1995) tm3 (1996-2000) RTLplus (2016-present)

Original release
  
(Tele 5) January 11, 1988 (1988-01-11) - January 2, 1992 (1992-01-02) (RTL II) June 10, 1993 (1993-06-10) - February 6, 1995 (1995-14-06) (tm3) January 1, 1995 (1995-01-01) - October 20, 2000 (2000-10-20) (Tele 5) October 25, 2004 (2004-10-25) - June 3, 2005 (2005-06-03) RTLplus (2016-present)

Presented by
  
Werner Schulze-Erdel, Jochen Bendel, Matthias Euler-Rolle, Oliver Geissen, Désirée Nosbusch

Similar
  
Game show, Sale of the Century, Bruce Forsyth's Hot Streak, Family Feud, Wheel of Fortune

Profiles

Nina hagen 1991 ruck zuck 1000 sendung tele 5 german quiz show


Ruck Zuck is the German version of the short-lived U.S. game show Bruce Forsyth's Hot Streak. It premiered on January 11, 1988, and ended on October 20, 2000 and four years later it came back to Tele 5 on October 25, 2004 and ended on June 3, 2005. Like its American counterpart, the series was packaged by Reg Grundy's Worldwide television empire. During its 1988-2000 and 2004-2005 run, Tele 5, RTL II and tm3 in its original incarnation, ran the show. Currently, the show has been revived on RTLplus since 2016.

Contents

Over time, the show had four hosts: Werner Schulze-Erdel (1988-1991), Jochen Bendel (1991-2000, 2004-2005), Matthias Euler-Rolle (2005) and Oliver Geissen (2016-present), while Désirée Nosbusch hosted a short-lived kids version of Ruck Zuck on Tele 5 called Kinder Ruck Zuck in 1992.

Eine folge ruck zuck mit jochen bendel 6


Rules

The game is played the same as its short-lived U.S. counterpart. Two teams of five players each, men vs. women competed. The leader of the team (which changes after every round), is given a choice of two words to choose from. The other team gets the unchosen word. The remaining players are wearing headphones that have music piped in them so they cannot hear what's going on. The object of the game is to describe the word to the next person in line, and then to the next person and so on. However, if at any time, a player describing the word, repeats a keyword or phrase that was already used to describe the word, their half of the round stops, and the scoring ends. For each successful transaction, the team scores points. The round lasts for 40 seconds.

Scoring

  • First three rounds - 1 point
  • Round 4 - 3 points
  • Tiebreaker

    The team with the most points at the end of the game wins, and then goes on to play the bonus round for the big money. In the event of a tie at the end of the fourth round, a tiebreaker round is played. The champion is shown a word. The captain can either play or pass the word. The team that plays the word must describe it all the way down the line in order to win. Failure to do so awards the opponent the win.

    Bonus Round

    In the bonus game, the host gave the team captain a word or phrase. The player gives the four words that the partners can think of associated with the word. While this is going on, the remaining teammates are wearing the headphones so they cannot hear just like in the main game. When that is all done, the players are brought out, and are given 20 seconds (five seconds per player) to say as many words as they can think of relating to the topic word, in hopes of saying the same words that the captain stated earlier. Each correct match wins the team money.

    Scoring

  • Round 1 - DM50 (€25)
  • Round 2 - DM100 (€51)
  • In the last round, the team must say ALL four words that the captain said to win four times the money for a maximum total of DM2400 (€1227). The winning team plays until defeated or has won six games. A team's sixth bonus round was played with only one word, with four correct answers winning a team DM50,000 (€25,564), later DM100,000 (€51,128), originally DM25,000 (€12,782) during the Werner Schulze-Erdel era.

    Kinder Ruck Zuck (Tele 5, 1992)

    Due to the success of the show, producers decided to make a kid's version of Ruck Zuck called Kinder Ruck Zuck. This version was hosted by Désirée Nosbusch. It featured German kids as contestants. Other than that it was played the same way as the adult version except that the kids were playing for a trip to Euro Disneyland. The main difference was that in the bonus round, the designated captain wore headphones while each of his or her teammates gave one word that fit the category, and the captain then had to guess all four words in 15 seconds to win the trip for the team.

    Der Gameshow-Marathon (ProSieben, 2007)

    On February 12, 2007, Ruck Zuck became one of several games on the German show called Der Gameshow-Marathon on ProSieben hosted by Oliver Pocher & Oliver Petszokat. In addition, former host Jochen Bendel made a brief appearance in the episode.

    20 Jahre RTL II (RTL II, 2013)

    On March 6, 2013, in conjunction with the anniversary of the channel called 20 Jahre RTL II (20 Years of RTL II) Ruck Zuck was revived as a one-time special with former host Jochen Bendel returning.

    Merchandise

    A Board Game (sold in Germany only) was released by Mattel in 1990.

    References

    Ruck Zuck (game show) Wikipedia