пятница 03 апреляadmin
Trivial Pursuit Live Questions 5,5/10 8296 reviews

Whilst playing the game you are given the opportunity to choose your category, usually from a choice of two.Use this selection to take advantage of the categories you need to answer 50 questions correctly in. Luckily you can pause the game at any time using you can then either google or wiki your question to find the answers.The game keeps track of how many of these you get right but the easiest way as with all One games is to use the native achievement app, every 2% = 1 correct answer. Note: Each correct answer given in 'Grab Bag' counts as a question answered correctly so grab bag can potentially net you 36 correct in one goIm going to be compiling a list of as many questions and answers I can in this thread herePost any that are not on the list so we can build an accurate list.

Use ctrl+f to be able to find your question quicklyYou will need to get all 6 achievements to get the following achievement anyway.

Ubisoft has been taking a gamble with more casual franchises as of late, to complement its more mainstream hits like Far Cry 4 and Assassin's Creed Unity. It's a great strategy that plays out to a general audience, for fans that can't quite get into the bloodshed of those other games. However, as we've seen from titles like Risk and Tetris Ultimate, something seems offabout these games. Like they're not quite the titles they could be.That's the case for Trivial Pursuit Live! as well, a game that takes the classic board game and turns it into an interactive show where contestants compete in real time.

Retrieved 22 October 2018. From the original on 21 October 2018. Baseball stars professional.

This is our page for questions and answers for Trivial Pursuit Live! We currently have 2 questions with 0 answers. Check the listing below or ask your own question. Get RTX Weekend Passes Here! We try Trivial Pursuit Live on Switch. With new questions come new ways to look stupid. More Trivial P.

There's potential here – about the same as EA's release of Pursuit on PS3 and 360 a few years ago – but it's squandered under an interface that runs into slowdown and online problems. It's like playing a board game with some of the pieces missing.

Questions And AnswersAs with the original Trivial Pursuit, the key goal is to answer questions and earn 'pies' that fill up your piece, across six different unique areas to choose from. The game gives you the opportunity to select a favorite, although that doesn't always guarantee that you'll get the answers right. Meanwhile, AI opponents can seemingly nail almost every one in this category, although they're not too perfect – still acting like dunderheads in certain spots.It's a good format, though not a great one, as it forces a game to stretch out longer than it has to be, thanks to useless contestant reactions and waiting for someone to move the round along. With local multiplayer, it's much better, as you can work to find all the right answers and actually make a contest out of it.Unfortunately, that's the extent of the joy, as online multiplayer feels broken for the most part. We tried to connect with a few sessions with this game and, sadly, came up empty-handed, thanks to server problems or Trivial Pursuit's inability to run efficiently. It's like trying to watch a game show when the antenna isn't working in your favor. Just skip it and stick with local.There is a single player component, but thanks to weirdly programmed AI and long pacing of matches, it really doesn't do much in the long run.

You can try to be a trivia whiz, but that's cheating in a way, so you're stuck. Maybe pull this out at your next party, but don't go depending on single player accessibility. Not A Winner In PresentationFor Trivial Pursuit Live!, Ubisoft has taken the generic approach when it comes to design. It works for a game like this, but you can't help but think that the format could use more pop – similarly to what EA did with Trivial Pursuit a whole ago. Was it faithful to the board game? But did it shine?

Trivial Pursuit here just seems rather average at best. The contestant design looks like something from the poor end of Xbox Avatar creation, and their interactivity within the game itself is minimal, at best.

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Pursuit

There are some good details with pictures that have you guessing with certain rounds, but it's hardly along the lines of greatness. It's just there. Worse, the audio fails to really sparkle. The game show-style music is generic and uninteresting, and the announcer and audience play by-the-numbers, instead of even coming close to the energy that Cookie Masterson generates in his You Don't Know Jack affairs. It's along the lines of what you'd find in an older Wii game, not a fresh Xbox One/PS4 download. The Trivia's The ThingWhen it comes to the trivia, the game does all right, with plenty of questions and categories to randomly run through.

However, that's really about all it has going for it, as its variations of modes are minimal, right down there with its presentation. The game's really best when you have friends (locally) to run through it with you, but that's really about it.

My ViewThese are the criteria I consider most important for reviewing Trivial Pursuit Live!Graphics: 5/10Set up like a game show, but nothing that really shines above what you'd find in a usual Xbox 360 party offering.Sound: 4/10Terribly average, with forgettable music, an unenergetic announcer and other lame effects.Gameplay: 6/10Decent rounds of trivia can be found here, but with broken online play and a disinteresting single player mode, it only takes you so far.Multiplayer: 6/10Forget online play, as it's not present. But the local options aren't bad, and decent for party fun.RATING: 5.2/10Trivial Pursuit deserved better – even if it is years old and has outdated questions for this generation of players. The Live! equivalent barely gets by because of its local multiplayer options, which are quite good. Otherwise, between a mundane presentation, not that much variety in modes and broken online play, there's really not much sweetness to come back to with these pies. Play the board game instead, or do like us and check out the You Don't Know Jack portion of The Jackbox Party Pack. It's about the same price, and has way more variety and personality.