%%There's no set number of players this time round so we'll just arrange in alphabetical order.
Each show takes place as a series of games, including but not limited to:

!! Bob's Call
Adapted from "Show Stopping Number", and the first time the resident musician participates actively in the game. The players act out a scene, and Bob is allowed to add some music at any time, starting with an intro that acts as the players' cue to turn it into a musical number.

!! First Date
Similar in concept to "New Choice" below - an actual couple is picked from the audience and asked about how they met, which is acted out by two players (with some help from the others). The couple is given two horns and two bells, allowing them to honk if the players get something wrong or ring if they get something right.

!! Forward/Reverse
Two players act out a scene, while a third player can call for the action to reverse at any time, making the two players re-enact their past actions in reverse, or at least as much as they can remember, making this the ''hardest'' game of all. Just to shake things up further, the third player can call 'fast forward' to speed things up or 'switch places' (two players get each others' lines and actions).

!! Freeze
Last seen in ''Green Screen Show'', this one [[OlderThanTheyThink actually dates back to the early UK run]] of ''Series/WhoseLineIsItAnyway'': two players start out in physical positions picked by the audience, then act out their scene with regards to said positions. At any time one of the other players can pause the action, replace one of the players and take the scene in a completely different direction; ''Green Screen Show'' began the practice of having the next player ''join in'' the action, leading to more elaborate four- to five-man acts.

!! Hits Compilation
Known as "Greatest Hits" during ''Whose Line'': after poaching the audience for a theme, two players act as presenters selling a compilation album based around that theme, making up song styles and titles while two or three other players have to sing those songs.

!! Kick It!
Basically the love child of "Show Stopping Number" and "Scene to Rap", two players act out the scene while a third can call 'Kick it' at any time, making the last person to speak turn the last thing he said into a gangsta rap, until the third calls 'Word' to end it.

!! Mousetraps
Possibly the most sadistic thing ever on television, two players have to act out a scene blindfolded, while walking barefoot on a stage covered in mousetraps. MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext.

!! Moving People
Exactly the same as it was in ''Whose Line'', two players act out a scene but cannot move on their own unless moved by two audience members.

!! New Choice
Last seen in ''Green Screen Show'', this one was known as "Quick Change" in ''Whose Line'': two players act out a scene while a third can call for either player to backtrack and replace their last lines or actions with something different.

!! Options
Basically "Film TV Theater Styles", elaborated on in ''Green Screen Show'' and taken up to eleven here. The audience's suggestions or styles of TV etc. are done ''during'' each pause rather than all written down before the scene starts, and ''Improv-a-ganza'' began the practice of invoking "Changed Letter" and "Number Of Words" play mechanics as well.

!! Playbook
Adapted from "Every Other Line" in the early UK ''Whose Line'', two players act out a scene, but one player's lines all come from a randomly picked playbook that ''usually'' have nothing to do with the scene at hand.

!! Question This
Not a renamed "Questions Only", but actually a homage to ''Series/{{Jeopardy}}''. One player takes the role of "host" with up to four other players as "contestants". The audience plays a bigger part than usual as each "contestant" names a category, thus prompting the audience to come up with their idea of an answer, and in turn making the "contestants" buzz in and answer in the form of a question. This one was last done in ''Drew Carey's Improv All-Stars'', a reunion stage show that came between ''Green Screen'' and ''Improv-a-ganza''.

!! Sentences
Originally known as "Whose Line" but expanded upon during ''Green Screen Show''. Two players act out a scene and have to read out pre-written lines that they must work into the scene somehow (it became more than two lines during ''Green Screen Show'').

!! Song For A Lady
Essentially the same as ''Duets'': two to three players sing a song about an audience member, only this time she is asked more questions about other aspects of life, making this game similar to "American Musical" from the early UK ''Whose Line''.

!! Sound Effects
Just like in ''Whose Line'', this game follows the Mk II variation ie. having two players act out a scene and two audience members providing the sounds as and when needed (usually).

!!Storytelling
Last seen in ''Green Screen Show'', all players line up in a row, save for one. The audience is poached for a title, and the standing players must make up the entire story, with the odd man out randomly picking one player after another to continue the tale.

!! Two-Headed Expert
A combination of "Three Headed Broadway Star" and "All in One Voice" but minus the singing. After the audience is poached for a subject, two pairs of two play this game, and one pair speaks alternatingly, one word at a time, while the other pair has to explain the subject to the first by speaking the same words at the exact same time.
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* ActorAllusion:
** One game of "Freeze" led to Jonathan going "[[Series/LetsMakeADeal Would you like to know what's behind curtain number 2?]]"
** A particularly elaborate one in episode 24:
--> Ryan: "Drew, you can't lose that much weight so fast... Remember me, [[Series/TheDrewCareyShow Lewis?]]"
** In that same game, Jeff using his fingers to mimic [[Series/ThePriceIsRight a tiny guy climbing up Chip and yodeling from the top.]]
** In one game of "Sentences," Drew was forced to say, "If you [[ItMakesSenseInContext don't like the way I smell,]] then (unfolds paper) ({{Beat}}) [[SugarWiki/FunnyMoments the price]] [[Series/ThePriceIsRight is wrong]]."
* AdoredByTheNetwork: GSN promoted the heck out of this show when it was first running, and gave it weekly marathons long after it had been cancelled. It even had its entire run posted to GSN's official Website/YouTube account in the early '10s. All this despite the fact it regularly got abysmal ratings, even scoring a *0.0* on the Nielsens at one point.
* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: When it first aired, episodes were posted on GSN's [=YouTube=] channel but after the series was removed from the network, the YT episodes were removed as well. There has been no news of a DVD release, nor are there legitimate avenues to stream it. The only option, aside from being lucky enough to have taped them off TV, is fan re-uploads.
* ProductionPosse: One of the strongest examples yet, with just two new faces (Heather Anne and Bob Derkach) and a mere ''handful'' of absent faces from ''Whose Line'' and ''Green Screen''. Even Wayne Brady puts in guest appearances, and that announcer over the opening credits is Rich Fields from ''Series/ThePriceIsRight''.
* StuntCasting: Wayne was evidently brought in to acclimate fans of ''Whose Line'' to this show.
* ThrowItIn: That most time-honored of ''Whose Line'' traditions, where the remaining players join in for whichever reason.
** Just a few examples: Colin returns as a [[CallBack velociraptor]] who plays the banjo, Chip and Jonathan jump in as the HISPANIC MEN during the "Totally party!" sketch, and Chip, Jeff, and Brad form an awkward mariachi band to serenade Drew and Kathy on their "first date".
** In a ''Moving People'' with Drew and Brad, Drew's German accent shifts to Italian American for no apparant reason.
** In the song ''Bail Me Out'', Jeff had trouble with his mike stand. So he ''sang'' "Gotta fix the stand!"
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