Rules
Two modes, two scoring systems. Normal mode is about HP and survival; Twitch chat mode is about cumulative points with no KO.
Normal
Every round your answer is sorted into one of six tiers, from PERFECT (very close to the real value) down to OUCH (way off). The tier decides how much HP you gain or lose. At 0 HP you're KO and watch the rest of the game as a spectator. The last player with HP wins — or, if several are still alive at the end, the one with the most HP.
Bonuses and penalties
- Exactly right answer+200 HP
Applies on top of the tier HP when your answer hits the value exactly.
- Speed bonus0 to +200 HP
Answer instantly for the full amount, answer in the last second for nothing. Only applies on a positive tier (PERFECT, GREAT or GOOD).
- No answer (TIME'S UP!)−1200 HP
Harsher than any OUCH. Staying silent does not pay.
At 0 HP you're KO. The winner is the last player with HP, or at the end the one with the most HP.
Twitch Chat
Viewers play along straight from the streamer's Twitch chat. No KO, no HP, just cumulative points across every round. Latecomers can jump in at any time and start collecting from there. Whoever has the most points at the end wins.
Points per round
(10 + Accuracy + Speed) × First-Try Bonus
How points work
- Taking partflat, for every answer you send+10
- Accuracylinear, bullseye = 1000 to +100
- Speedinstant = 50+ points, last second = 00 to +50
Multipliers
- First-Try Bonusonly if you never changed your answer, applied to the total×1.25
- Correction penaltyhits the speed portion when you change your answer, instead of First-Try×0.5
Examples
Example 1 · Fast bullseye, first try
What happens here: You answer in a flash and hit it exactly. Maximum accuracy score, a big speed bonus, plus the First-Try multiplier on the entire sum.
30-second round, answer after 6 seconds, 100% accuracy, no correction.
Example 2 · Identical answer, but corrected once
What happens here: Identical correct answer, but you changed your mind once. You lose the First-Try bonus and half of your speed portion.
Same scenario as above, but the player changed their choice once.
58 points of difference for a single correction on an otherwise identical answer.