Test your Fortunes skills and take your opponent’s coins 5 Game Modes: Classic, Big Money, Tournaments, Big Money Tournaments and Live Can you reach the elusive Superstar level? Prove that you’re the Ultimate player to win huge! Play against the best to secure the grand prize.įind someone new to play with and make a new friend! With over 1.5 million new friends made while playing, Family Fortunes® is the best way to connect with someone that YOU want to play with! Prefer playing BIG Money Rounds? Now you can! Win bigger prizes get 200 points on the scoreboard for an extra bonus, just like the show! With 5 game modes to choose from, there’s a Fortunes-style for everyone!ĬHALLENGE 1-ON-1 IN CLASSIC FAMILY FORTUNES FUNĪnswer the best Fortunes surveys and play the best gameshow game, EVER! Master the questions and take all the coins for yourself! Play Family Fortunes® any way you’d like. The core the app gets playing about right, but the writing (of the questions) and presentation feel so ‘off’ that it’s difficult to get much enjoyment out of it.SURVEY SAYS: It’s time to play the Family Fortunes®!īe the fastest contestant to type in and see your answers light up the board! Play Family Fortunes® and enjoy new graphics, surveys and challenges to become the Ultimate player! It’s difficult not to feel this is just a foreign version (most likely Family Feud) just reskinned. Two player mode works correctly in the confines of what you are given – you the iPad to buzz in on toss-up questions, winners go through to Big Money. Apparently £30k wins are possible, but it doesn’t tell you which ones of your answers are top ones, so thanks for that. If you win the main game you get to go through to Big Money where you get to answer the same set of questions twice in your bid to win £10,000. The game follows the rules closely – spot prizes are avaliable, although they always seem to be £1,000. Actually playing the game isn’t too awful if you can get past everything – you type your answers in but it will bring up predictions you can just tap on to save yourself filling the rest out (in fairness, the opening example is more of an exception than the rule, but it’s not a great first impression). Single player is you facing off against one of twelve computer families, seemingly increasing in difficulty as you go along and each victory unlocking wardrobe elements (as head of family you get to dress yourself up from a fairly limited collection of clothes). You have the choice of single player or two player. Answer number six, and surprisingly low considering, is lack of proper “eh-errrr” noise except bafflingly in the Big Money round where it puts in a celebrity guest appearance. Answer number four is “a fifth family member”. Answer number three is particularly well written questions – rather anodyne and surprisingly difficult to answer in the main, and in playtesting I came across “name things you put on a snowman” and both “carrot” and “a nose” are separate answers. Answer number two: Vernon Kay, instead we appear to have a rent-a-Northerner (the credits suggest it’s someone named Julian Casey) who carries little of Kay’s charm or authority – it’s easy to knock Kay, but you’ll be crying out for him after five minutes of this I guarantee. However, here is a list of things it doesn’t have: Top answer: the theme tune (it has something that sounds as though it might be ours for the first few bars, but then goes elsewhere). And it plays basically Family Fortunes (using the rules to All-Star Family Fortunes). Sure it’s got the logo and it’s got the set (for reasons best known to Ludia, our version of the show appears to take place in front of the Acropolis). It was something like “name a word that rhymes with ‘jumpy’, I put three different answers in and they were all correct, except in a twist nobody saw coming, the answers that went up on the board were different to the answers I put in. Well I think the first game of this I played sums up the quality quite well. Requires iPad with iOS v3.2 or later (Iphone version also avaliable)