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'Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?' comes to PCs

ByABC News
September 22, 2007, 4:34 PM

— -- If you know who the first vice president of the United States was, you could win a million dollars virtual dollars, that is. That's one of the final questions in Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader? for the PC. The game mimics the popular Fox television show of the same name and allows the whole family to test their elementary-school smarts.

As on the TV show, you become the single contestant in a trivia game that tests your knowledge of academic subjects typically found in the first through fifth grades. To win, you must correctly answer 11 questions in a row.

Playing with you are five virtual fifth-graders. They answer the questions along with you and, at any time, you can use them for two special cheats: to peek at one student's answer and then decide what your answer will be, or copy what the designated student has written. Additionally, one time in the game, if the classmate working beside you gets the answer right and you get it wrong, that fifth-grader can save you from losing.

The questions come from a bank of more than 3,000 questions drawn from popular textbooks. The questions fall into 28 different categories covering math, science, geography, history, health, English, spelling and more. You can choose the order in which you want to respond to the first 10 questions. There are two each from the five grade levels. The million-dollar last question is randomly generated.

The game looks like the set of the TV show, and you even hear Jeff Foxworthy, the host of the Fox show, narrate the game and dish and quip as you play. If you take a long time answering, he will assume that you looked it up on the Internet and then complain that it's not fair. If you get a question wrong, you might hear him ask if you fell off the monkey bars a lot as a child. Ouch!

While Foxworthy's computer self looks like him, the fifth-grade classmates look like smushed clay animation kids. But they clap for you when you answer correctly. Just as in the show, the tension builds by the use of dramatic music.