Tipping Point (game show)


Tipping Point is a British quiz show that has aired on ITV1 since 2 July 2012. The show also airs repeats on ITV Quiz, which is owned by the same company as the ITV network, U&W, which is owned by the UKTV network, and Really, which is owned by Warner Bros. Discovery. In South Africa, this programme is also on BBC Brit. The programme is presented by Ben Shephard and features three players answering questions on the subject of general knowledge in order to win counters, which they use on a large coin pusher arcade-style machine in order to win cash and prizes.

Gameplay

The machine consists of two shelves filled with flat circular counters; the upper shelf slowly extends and retracts, whilst the lower one is stationary. The rear face of the machine is divided into four drop zones, each of which contains a pegboard similar to those found in pachinko machines. Contestants answer questions to win counters, then choose a drop zone and press their buzzer to release one counter at a time into that zone. The goal is to have the counters land flat on the upper shelf so that its retraction will cause the counters to push others over the shelf's front edge, leading them in turn to push still others off the lower shelf and into a collection trough referred to as the "win zone". Contestants win £50 for each counter that drops into the win zone during their turn. Any counters that bounce out of the machine and land on either the floor or the lip of the win zone during a turn are still credited toward that contestant's score.
Only the winner at the end has a chance to take home any money; the others forfeit their accumulated totals.
Three "mystery counters" were introduced in Series 2, each labelled with a question mark. For each mystery counter that enters the win zone, the contestant in control of the machine wins a prize which is theirs to keep regardless of the game's final outcome. Two "double counters" were introduced in Series 5, each labelled "x2". If one double counter enters the win zone, all counters falling on that same drop are scored for double value ; if both double counters fall on the same drop, the total is quadrupled. As of Series 9, the mystery and double counters are respectively coloured green and yellow to more easily distinguish them from the others in the machine. Typically, the game begins with one counter of each type on the lower shelf and the other ones on the upper shelf.
Counters that enter the win zone when the machine is not in play are "ambient drops" and are removed from the machine with no effect on scoring. If such a drop occurs after a contestant has chosen a drop zone but before they have pressed the buzzer to release a counter, they are given the option to play from that zone or select a different one. Any mystery or double counters that fall into the win zone as an ambient drop are put back in the machine as near as possible to the position they occupied before falling.
A "ghost drop" occurs when a counter drifts forward as it falls through a drop zone and its face makes contact with the clear plastic sheet covering the front of the zone. The resulting friction can greatly slow the counter or even stop its descent altogether for a very short period of time. Ghost drops, mistimed drops and unexpected bounces can lead to a counter landing on the upper shelf so that it partially overlaps or "rides" on others; such plays rarely trigger falls into the win zone and can adversely affect a contestant's turn.
An "edge surfer" occurs when a counter exits through a drop zone and remains on its edge as the shelf moves forward. Whether the counter drops before or on top of the stack of counters on the edge of the drop zone can also affect a contestant's turn.
In Series 1 to 11, with four contestants per episode, the lowest-scoring contestant at the end of each round is eliminated from the game and forfeits all their money. In the event of a tie for low score, a sudden death toss-up is used to break the tie. A correct buzz-in answer allows the contestant to advance while a wrong answer eliminates them. If more than two contestants are tied for low score, the toss-ups continue until either one has been eliminated or all but one have advanced. As of Series 12, with three contestants per episode, eliminations occur only at the end of Rounds 2 and 3.
Contestants who are blind or visually impaired are allowed to have a helper stationed backstage who can see the machine on a monitor and give advice through an audio earpiece as to where and when to play each counter. Contestants who are deaf or hearing impaired are allowed to have an interpreter on stage, who can interpret between spoken words and sign language. However, in both cases, the helper or interpreter may not assist in answering questions or take any other active role in the game.

Round 1

Each contestant is given three counters at the outset. The host asks a series of toss-up general knowledge questions and the first contestant to buzz-in may answer. A correct answer allows the contestant to either play one of their own counters or force an opponent to play one instead, based on their judgement of how likely the machine is to pay out on that particular turn. Once a contestant has used all of their counters, they may not answer any more questions. When only one contestant has any counters remaining, they do not need to use their buzzer but must continue answering questions correctly in order to use their counters.
A contestant who gives a wrong answer or no answer at any time loses one counter, which is placed into a penalty pot. If this pot contains any counters by the end of the round, they are put at stake on one final toss-up open to all contestants. A correct answer awards all the counters, while a miss freezes the contestant out for a new question asked to the others. If no contestants miss any questions, the round ends once they have all used the three counters they were given.

Round 2

Each contestant answers 45 seconds of rapid-fire general knowledge questions and receives a counter for each correct answer. Once the time is up, the contestant uses the counters they earned in an attempt to win more money. The contestant in the lead after Round 1 decides who will play first; after the chosen contestant has finished their turn, the higher scoring of the two remaining contestants decides who will play next. In case of a tie at any point, the contestant who first gave a correct answer in Round 1 has priority. At the end of the round, the contestant with the lowest score is eliminated.

Round 3

The two remaining contestants are asked six questions; three directed to each contestant alternately. After hearing the question, the contestant in control may either answer or pass to their opponent. A correct answer awards a counter to the contestant giving it, while a wrong answer awards the counter to the opponent. Each counter is used as soon as it is earned. The contestant in the lead after Round 2 decides who will have initial control. If the contestants are tied going into this round, the contestant who was leading at the beginning of Round 2 has priority.

Final

The last remaining contestant is given a jackpot counter and chooses a zone from which to drop it into the machine. The goal of this round is to win a £10,000 jackpot by getting the counter into the win zone. In order to do so, the contestant must earn counters by answering one multiple choice question from each of six categories in any order desired. Questions have three answer options and may be played for one, two or three counters, with higher-value questions being more difficult. The correct answer awards the chosen number of counters, which the contestant immediately plays into the machine.
Counters that enter the win zone during this round are still worth £50 apiece, including any that fall during the initial playing of the jackpot counter, and the mystery and double counters are still in effect. Unlike the main game, ambient drops are added to the contestant's winnings as long as they occur between the initial playing of the jackpot counter and the playing of any counters earned from the last category. If the jackpot counter enters the win zone, the contestant's cash total is augmented to £10,000; as of Series 8, the jackpot is doubled to £20,000 or quadrupled to £40,000 if one or both double counters fall with the jackpot respectively.
If the contestant fails to win the jackpot after using up all six categories, they may either trade the accumulated money for three more counters or end the game at this point and keep all winnings. If the contestant trades, all the counters except the jackpot counter award no money and they forfeit all the accumulated money if it remains in the machine; however, the double and mystery counters remain in effect only if they fall with the jackpot. If the contestant ends the game and the jackpot counter is on the bottom shelf, they play the three additional counters to see if they would have been able to win the jackpot by trading.

''Tipping Point: Lucky Stars'' and ''Specials''

A celebrity version under the title Tipping Point: Lucky Stars where celebrities are playing on behalf of a selected charity. In the celebrity version, each episode has a live audience. The episodes are broadcast in a primetime slot.
The celebrity episodes feature some changes to the ordinary format:
  1. All cash values are doubled, therefore normal and mystery counters are worth £100 and the jackpot is £20,000.
  2. There are no double counters in the machine.
  3. Mystery counters award either a joke prize, a cash bonus or a question relevant to the contestant in control that allows them to play one bonus counter by giving the correct answer. In the Soccer Aid Specials, the prizes are donations to help people in need and the counters have the Soccer Aid logo on them instead of the question mark.
  4. The time limit in Round 2 is 30 seconds.
  5. The contestants who do not make it to the Final still take home the money they have accumulated for their chosen charities and a donation is still made to any contestant who is eliminated without accumulating any money.
  6. In the Final, if the contestant takes the trade at the end but fails, their charity still receives £1,000.

''Tipping Point: Best Ever Finals''

Tipping Point: Best Ever Finals is a half hour spin-off that is shown at times when the Regular or Lucky Stars episodes are neither first broadcast nor repeated. The programme showcases the best and most dramatic finales from previous episodes of Regular Tipping Point and as of Series 2, they also included some dramatic finales from previous episodes of the primetime celebrity spin-off Tipping Point: Lucky Stars.

Transmissions

Regular

SeriesStart dateEnd dateRecordedEpisodesNotes
12 July 201227 July 2012201220Debuted as one of the summer replacements of The Chase with the other being Don't Blow the Inheritance. On 2 July 2022, there was a repeat of Episode 1 for its 10-year anniversary. Series 1 did not take any breaks.
22 January 201326 February 2013201240First series to feature the mystery counters. Series 2 did not take any breaks.
320 May 201320 November 2013201370Series 3 took breaks on 1 July–6 September and 28 October–1 November 2013.
417 February 201429 August 2014201370Series 4 took breaks on 21 April, 28 April–6 June and 10 June–1 August 2014.
55 January 20154 December 20152014125First series to feature the double counters. Series 5 took breaks on 16–27 March, 4 May–4 September, 23–24 September, 1 October, 7 October, 16 October, 10–19 November and 26–27 November 2015.
67 December 201521 October 20162015149Series 6 took breaks on 18 December 2015–1 January and 23 May–26 August 2016.
72 January 201710 November 20172016150Series 7 took breaks on 20 January due to Donald Trump becoming US President, 14–17 March, 22 March, 6–7 April and 1 June–1 September 2017.
88 January 201817 May 20192017165First series where the double counters double the jackpot as well as the last series to feature the black mystery and double counters. Series 8 took breaks on 12–16 March, 9–13 April, 23 April due to the birth of Prince Louis of Wales, 28 May–30 August and 10 December 2018–10 May 2019.
91 January 20199 December 20202018165First series to feature the respective green and yellow mystery and double counters. Series 9 took breaks on 12–15 March, 1–5 April, 13 May–30 August, 9 December 2019–31 August and 14 September–8 December 2020.
101 January 202012 March 20212019165 Series 10 took breaks on 9–13 March, 23 March–11 September, 9–31 December 2020 and 20 January 2021 due to Joe Biden becoming US President.
1119 April 20211 June 20222020165This series had 18 episodes filmed shortly before the first COVID-19 lockdown regulations took place. After lockdown, the filming production resumed with COVID-19 safety measures in place, which involved the other 147 episodes using a new setup. Last series to feature four contestants and to use the 30-second time limit in Round 2. This series started later than originally planned due to the death of Prince Philip. Series 11 took breaks on 4 June–27 August, 2 September, 13–27 December 2021 and 14 March–27 May 2022.
1211 April 20228 September 20232021164First series to feature three contestants and to use the 45-second time limit in Round 2. This series still used COVID-19 safety measures. Series 12 took breaks on 30 May–2 September, 6 September due to Liz Truss becoming UK Prime Minister, 9–19 September due to the death of Queen Elizabeth II, 21 November to 27 December 2022, 13 March–12 May, 2–5 June, 7–8 June, 12 June–25 August and 11 September 2023–present.
1317 April 2023TBA 2026 or 2027202299Series 13 took breaks on 15 May–8 September, 22 September due to the 4:45pm 2023 Rugby World Cup coverage kick off, 23 October 2023–26 January, 11 March–30 August, 5 September 2024–14 February, 3 March–2 May and 12 May 2025–present.
149 September 2024TBA 2026 or 2027202399Series 14 took breaks on 12–13 September, 19–20 September, 26–27 September, 3–4 October, 10–11 October, 17–18 October, 24 October 2024–28 February, 6–7 March, 11–14 March, 20–21 March, 27–28 March, 3–4 April, 10–11 April, 17–21 April, 24–25 April, 30 April–16 May and 2 June 2025–present.
15TBA 2026TBA 2026 or 20272025TBAThe application closing date was 15 August 2025 with the casting period taking place between June and August 2025.

''Lucky Stars''

SeriesStart dateEnd dateEpisodesNotes
19 June 201325 August 201312
25 July 201423 August 20148
315October 20163December 20168
43September 201729 October 20178Last series to feature the black mystery counters. Series 4 took breaks on.
57 July 201922September 201911First series to feature the green mystery counters. Series 5 took breaks on 1September 2019.
613September 202029November 202012Series 6 did not take any breaks.
74 April 202116 May 20217This series was filmed with COVID-19 safety measures in place. Series 7 did not take any breaks.
83 April 202224 July 20229This series still used COVID-19 safety measures. Series 8 took breaks on 17 April, 29 May–3July and 17 July 2022 due to Britain looking for a new prime minister.
916 July 202310November 20249Series 9 took breaks on 6 August, 10September 2023–22 September and 6October–3November 2024.
108 September 20241 January 20269Series 10 took breaks on 29 September, 13October, 10–24 November and.

''Specials''

TitleFirst broadcastNotes
2014 Text Santa Special19 December 2014
2015 Text Santa Special18 December 2015Also Series 6, Episode 10
2018 Christmas Special29 December 2018
2019 Christmas Special25 December 2019
2020 Christmas Special24 December 2020This episode was filmed with COVID-19 safety measures in place.
2021 Soccer Aid Special2 September 2021This episode still used COVID-19 safety measures. Contestants: Chris Hughes, Charley Boorman and Ali Hamidi
2021 Christmas Special24 December 2021This episode still used COVID-19 safety measures. Contestants: Bobby Norris, Scarlett Moffatt and Anton Du Beke
2022 Soccer Aid Special9 June 2022Contestants: Lee Juggurnauth, Liv Cooke and Jeff Brazier
2022 Christmas Special17 December 2022Contestants: Mr Motivator, Josie Gibson and Len Goodman
2023 Soccer Aid Special8 June 2023Contestants: Brian McFadden, Maisie Adam and Sam Matterface
2023 Christmas Special26 December 2023

''Best Ever Finals''

SeriesStart dateEnd dateEpisodesNotes
112 March 201917 November 20195Series 1 took breaks on 16 March–16 November 2019.
210 March 202014 June 202112First series to show finales from Lucky Stars. Series 2 took breaks on 14 March 2020–19 January, 21 January–15 March, 20–27 March, 29 March–5 June and 7–13 June 2021.
315 March 202229 August 20228Series 3 took breaks on 19 March–16 August and 20–28 August 2022.
414 March 202315 March 20248Series 4 took breaks on 18 March 2023–11 March 2024.
516 November 202416 May 20258Series 5 took breaks on 18–22 November, 24–29 November, 1–25 December and 27 December 2024–13 May 2025.
6March 2026TBA 2026 or 2027TBA

International transmissions

  • Australia – the Nine Network first broadcast the original British version on 2 December 2019, replacing its 3:00 pm news bulletin, Nine News Now, which went on hiatus during the Australian summer non-ratings period. Episodes air at 3:00 pm Mondays-Thursdays in direct competition with rival ITV-produced game show The Chase on the Seven Network; its Lucky Stars counterpart airs on Fridays in the same timeslot. A repeat of the same day's episode is shown sometime after midnight the following day. For a brief period in January 2021, episodes also aired in prime time, at 7:30 pm Saturdays. In April 2023, it was announced that a localised Australian version, produced by Endemol Shine Australia was in the early planning stages, and would be filmed on the UK set. On 10 August 2023, it was announced that Nine would be ending Millionaire Hot Seat in 2024 and would replace it with a local version of Tipping Point to be filmed in Melbourne and hosted by Todd Woodbridge.
  • Ireland – Virgin Media Two airs episodes Monday to Friday at 4:00pm and 5:00pm.
  • New Zealand – TVNZ 1 airs episodes of the original British version as well as its celebrity Lucky Stars counterpart Monday to Saturday at 10:00am and Monday to Friday at 3:00pm.

International versions

Legend:
CountryLocal nameNetworkPresenterEach counter worthJackpotAirdate
Australia

Merchandise

The official Tipping Point app for iOS was released by Barnstorm Games on 30 March 2014. The Android version was later released on 3 April 2014. An electronic board game based on the show was released in 2015 by John Adams under its Ideal Games brand. Another Tipping Point app was released in 2020 called ''Tipping Point Blast!''