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** As a matter of fact, the only way to win the top prize on ''[[Series/{{Pyramid}} The $20,000 Pyramid]]'' is to blow the first two bonus rounds.
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* Japan has a nationwide cap set at 2 million yen (currently around $18,455 / £12,755 as of May 2016) per person and 10 million yen total for a prize split among five or more players (about $92,277 / £63,888). As a result, even single-player shows like ''Millionaire'' have the contestant bring along four friends and/or family members with whom to split the prize.
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* Japan has a nationwide cap set at 2 million yen (currently around $18,455 $13,492 / £12,755 £10,676 as of May 2016) November 2023) per person and 10 million yen total for a prize split among five or more players (about $92,277 $67,460 / £63,888).£53,380). As a result, even single-player shows like ''Millionaire'' have the contestant bring along four friends and/or family members with whom to split the prize.
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** Creator/{{CBS}} imposed a cap on game show winnings. Initially, contestants on CBS-affiliated shows were retired after winning $25,000, and could not keep any winnings over that limit (although sometime in the mid-to-late 1970s, a contestant could keep up to $10,000 more than the limit, for a $35,000 maximum payout). The cap increased to $50,000 in 1984, $75,000 by 1986, then $125,000 in the early 1990s. By 2006, with ''Series/ThePriceIsRight'' having long since been the only CBS original game show (although a new incarnation of ''Series/LetsMakeADeal'' joined it in 2009), the winnings cap was done away with entirely.
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** Creator/{{CBS}} imposed a cap on game show winnings. Initially, contestants on CBS-affiliated shows were retired after winning $25,000, and could not keep any winnings over that limit (although sometime in the mid-to-late 1970s, a contestant could keep up to $10,000 more than the limit, for a $35,000 maximum payout). ''Series/{{Whew}}'', not by coincidence, offered that much as the jackpot for winning the bonus round. The cap increased to $50,000 in 1984, $75,000 by 1986, then $125,000 in the early 1990s. By 2006, with ''Series/ThePriceIsRight'' having long since been the only CBS original game show (although a new incarnation of ''Series/LetsMakeADeal'' joined it in 2009), the winnings cap was done away with entirely.
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** ''Family Feud'' retired families at $25,000 (later over $30,000 in the final season of the Richard Dawson version)
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** ''Family Feud'' retired families at $25,000 (later over $30,000 in the final season of the Richard Dawson version)version).