Television A version of
Trivial Pursuit, hosted by
Wink Martindale, aired on
The Family Channel in the
United States from 1993 to 1994 (
Jay Wolpert had attempted a pilot in 1987, but it was not picked up). A
syndicated version entitled
Trivial Pursuit: America Plays aired from 2008 to 2009 and hosted by
Christopher Knight. In September 2004,
Roger Lodge hosted a sports trivia game show on
ESPN entitled
ESPN Trivial Pursuit, which aired five episodes. A new version of the game premiered on October 3, 2024 on
The CW hosted by
LeVar Burton.
BBC Television produced a
Trivial Pursuit game show based on the game in the
UK hosted by
Rory McGrath. Another British version (with rules/format similar to the Wink Martindale version, and also using the same theme tune as the Wink Martindale version) was hosted on
The Family Channel (now Challenge) by
Tony Slattery. In 1991, a local version was aired in
Austria, hosted by Bernadette Schneider on
ORF. In
Germany, Birgit Lechtermann hosted a local version for
VOX from 1993 to 1994. In 1988, a made-for-television movie entitled
Breaking all the Rules: The Creation of Trivial Pursuit aired. Treated largely as a comedy, the movie featured the music of
Jimmy Buffett and portrayed the creators of the game as three beer-loving Canadians. The actors were
Gordon Clapp as John Haney,
Malcolm Stewart as Chris Haney and
Bruce Pirrie as Scott Abbott. In
Spain, a version of the show called
Trivial Pursuit was aired in 2011 and presented by Silvia Jato on Veo7. The
Soviet Union in 1989 bought the rights to produce its own version of the board game, and also started an official championship for family teams, finals of which were broadcast on
Soviet Central Television as the game show
Lucky Case (russian: Счастливый случай). After the agreement ended in 1991, the show changed their rules, dropping
Trivial Pursuit elements, and continued broadcasting until 2000.
Arcade game In 1984,
Bally Sente released a
Trivial Pursuit arcade game. Like the board game, several variants were also subsequently released.
Home computer games British software company
Domark released a home computer version (billed as
Trivial Pursuit: The Computer Game) for multiple formats during the 1980s. This version included pictorial and musical questions but was otherwise mostly faithful to the mechanics of the original board game. Later, Domark released another version called
Trivial Pursuit: A New Beginning, also across multiple formats. This version featured a plot about the dying Earth and significantly altered gameplay mechanics. to release a downloadable online game on The Station@Sony (home to
Everquest at the time), where up to three auto-matched players could chat with each other live while they played. A correct answer on any space earned a wedge on the category answered, the wedge spaces gave the player their choice of category, and the first person to earn four wedges was the winner. It was hosted on The Station until 2001. In 2003, Bolenka Games released an online game of
Trivial Pursuit on the now-defunct website Uproar.com where it features five editions such as:
Genius,
Silver Screen,
Music,
1980s and
TV.
Video games Trivial Pursuit was released for a number of home video systems, including
Sega CD,
Wii,
Windows Phone,
Xbox 360,
Xbox One,
PlayStation 2 and
PlayStation 3. The board game was also adapted into a mobile game called
Trivia Crack as well as
Trivial Pursuit Genius Edition for the Nokia 3650, 6600, N-Gage, and Siemens SX1.
Ubisoft released
Trivial Pursuit: Live!, on 17 December 2014 for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, on 18 February 2015 for Xbox One and
PlayStation 4. It is similar to the
Buzz! series. On Xbox One and PS4, it is a part from the Hasbro Game Channel, and it was released in physical on the
Hasbro Family Fun Pack compilation on 25 October 2016. It was ported on 30 October 2018 on
Nintendo Switch, for the
Hasbro Game Night compilation in physical or individually for download. A sequel called
Trivial Pursuit Live! 2, published by Ubisoft and developed by
Snap Finger Click, was released in 2022 for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, and
Stadia. Trivial Pursuit was also adapted into a featured game on the
NTN system of video-bar-trivia games. The game ran during the early 2000s. ==References==