I NEVER knew that there was a TPIR pricing game called "Split Decision" before today!! This is the very FIRST TIME I've ever seen this game played!! Needless to say that it didn't last long. Thanks lots for posting!! :)
@@hunterandrews1737 Well I didn't even know that. I only thought that because it plays somewhat similar to Make Your Move. Split Decision wasn't a bad game though, and neither were other pricing games like Poker Game and Super Ball.
The prop was a piece of crap. They should have used the disks like Bonkers has and kept the clock running like Bonkers or Race Game. People just stood there most of the time looking stupid. You can't win by just doing that.
No. Make Your Move is played for three prizes. (A 2 digit, 3 digit and 4 digit prize) The other thing is the numbers of the prizes on Make Your Move have to be adjacent as the game uses slider panels to mark each prize. With this game the digits of the smaller prize that has to be pulled down can appear anywhere in the number lineup.
@@GamingDelight Make your Move's gameplay : The contestant is shown a board containing a string of nine digits representing the prices of three prizes placed consecutively. Below the digits are three sliding color-coded markers (red, yellow, and green) which represent the prizes. The red marker represents the two-digit prize, the yellow marker is the three-digit prize and the green marker is the four-digit prize. The contestant must slide the three markers so that each is placed below the correct price for the corresponding prize. All nine digits must be used and each digit may be used only once, as the prices never overlap. If the contestant is correct, they win all three prizes. It's possible to be right about only one of the prizes, but in this situation, the contestant does not win the one prize they were correct about.
I NEVER knew that there was a TPIR pricing game called "Split Decision" before today!! This is the very FIRST TIME I've ever seen this game played!! Needless to say that it didn't last long. Thanks lots for posting!! :)
I think this was how the pricing game Make Your Move came to be, only without the 20 second timer.
Make your move was already in rotation long before split decision debuted
@@hunterandrews1737 Well I didn't even know that. I only thought that because it plays somewhat similar to Make Your Move. Split Decision wasn't a bad game though, and neither were other pricing games like Poker Game and Super Ball.
For a few playings, they simply gave the player 3 chances to do it.
A precursor to Bonkers.
Not quite. Because Bonkers involves the contestants to guess if the numbers are higher or lower than the wrong price that you have to change.
AND Now You See It.
The clock ticking sound effect, reminds of the 1996 game show, Debt with Wink Martindale
They could've used Wheel of Fortune's old timer.
LOL the clock stopped at 11 for 4-5 seconds.
This game is not as terrible as everyone on other price is right websites have claimed it to be.
Poor Antonio was the unfortunate test monkey of what turned out to be a bad pricing game.
Well he at least knew the car 🚗 was around $12,000
I'd never seen this game. I can see why it obviously didn't last.
Unlike Any Number, spilt decision will give players 2 prizes.
Audience didn't seem to happy when the game was revealed.
@4:32 Longest shock buzzer ever. It even drowned out all of the losing horns notes to the end.
Yep!!!!!
I wish they would bring back Give or Keep, I liked that game, didn't seem too hard to play
I`ll y'all a dollar everyone in the studio audience thought they were going to play Any Number haha
Another title for a TPIR feature that was previously used on a game show pilot.
I did see this one!
he did 515 twice did Bob catch that? EEEEEH! NO!
Rip split decision 1995 to 1997
@htmlcc92 I noticed that too!!
Was it just me, or when he started when he had 12 seconds left, it went down to 11, and just stayed there?
That's correct.
The slow playing of this game is the main reason it got retired--along with its difficulty.
Bonkers is a better game. It's absolutely crazy, but it all pays off when they win.
It’s a lot like 10-Chances but with just two prizes
I wonder how come they don't play this game anymore? It looks like a fun game to play.
It was a complete mess. In a couple of playings, it fell apart
The prop was a piece of crap. They should have used the disks like Bonkers has and kept the clock running like Bonkers or Race Game. People just stood there most of the time looking stupid. You can't win by just doing that.
Right off the reveal, the audience seemed to hate this game.... Still easier than Stack The Deck, lol
@cbs All New "Split Decision"!!! Coming Soon......
Rest in peace, Bob Barker
Thursday November 9th , 1995
@priceisright All New "Split Decision"!!! Coming Soon......
Original Airdate November 9 1995
isn't this just "make your move"?
No.
Make Your Move is played for three prizes. (A 2 digit, 3 digit and 4 digit prize)
The other thing is the numbers of the prizes on Make Your Move have to be adjacent as the game uses slider panels to mark each prize. With this game the digits of the smaller prize that has to be pulled down can appear anywhere in the number lineup.
@@SupermarketSweep777 Not to mention that you can't overlap these prize numbers.
@@matthaddock1817 True but they killed that rule in Make Your Move long ago.
@@SupermarketSweep777
They never killed the rule against overlapping numbers in Make Your Move. The rules of that game never changed.
@@GamingDelight
Make your Move's gameplay :
The contestant is shown a board containing a string of nine digits representing the prices of three prizes placed consecutively. Below the digits are three sliding color-coded markers (red, yellow, and green) which represent the prizes. The red marker represents the two-digit prize, the yellow marker is the three-digit prize and the green marker is the four-digit prize.
The contestant must slide the three markers so that each is placed below the correct price for the corresponding prize. All nine digits must be used and each digit may be used only once, as the prices never overlap. If the contestant is correct, they win all three prizes. It's possible to be right about only one of the prizes, but in this situation, the contestant does not win the one prize they were correct about.