Remove ads
German television game show From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wer wird Millionär? is a German game show based on the original British format of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?. It is shown on RTL on Mondays and Fridays at 20:15 (CET/CEST). It is hosted by Günther Jauch. The show has been broadcast from 3 September 1999 until today.
Wer wird Millionär? | |
---|---|
Created by | Endemol |
Presented by | Günther Jauch |
Country of origin | Germany |
Production | |
Running time | about 45 minutes 180 minutes (celebrity edition) |
Production companies | Celador (1999–2007) 2waytraffic (2007–2020) Sony Pictures Television (2020–present) Endemol (1999–2015) Endemol Shine Germany (2015–present) |
Original release | |
Network | RTL |
Release | 3 September 1999 – present |
The main goal of the show is to win €1 million (previously 1 million DM) by answering 15 multiple-choice questions correctly. If contestants get the fifth question correct, they will leave with at least €500. If they get the tenth question correct, they will leave with at least €16,000, unless they enabled the fourth 'lifeline' (added in 2007).
Question number | Question value (Yellow zones are the guaranteed levels)[1] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1999–2001 | 2002–present | Gamblers' Special[a] (2013–present) |
1,500th episode (2021) |
3 Million Euro Week (2022–present) | |
1 | 100 DM (€51.13) | €50 | €100 | €1 | €100 |
2 | 200 DM (€102.26) | €100 | €200 | €5 | €200 |
3 | 300 DM (€153.39) | €200 | €300 | €55 | €400 |
4 | 500 DM (€255.65) | €300 | €500 | €111 | €500 |
5 | 1,000 DM (€511.29) | €500 | €1,000 | €555 | €1,000 |
6 | 2,000 DM (€1,022.58) | €1,000 | €2,000 | €1,111 | €2,000 |
7 | 4,000 DM (€2,045.17) | €2,000 | €4,000 | €2,222 | €5,000 |
8 | 8,000 DM (€4,090.34) | €4,000 | €8,000 | €4,444 | €10,000 |
9 | 16,000 DM (€8,180.67) | €8,000 | €16,000 | €8,888 | €20,000 |
10 | 32,000 DM (€16,361.34) | €16,000[b] | €32,000[c] | €15,555 (4 lifelines) €33,333 (3 lifelines) |
€30,000 |
11 | 64,000 DM (€32,722.68) | €32,000 | €64,000 | €55,555 | €50,000 |
12 | 125,000 DM (€63,911.49) | €64,000 | €125,000 | €77,777 | €100,000 |
13 | 250,000 DM (€127,822.97) | €125,000 | €250,000 | €133,333 | €250,000 |
14 | 500,000 DM (€255,645.94) | €500,000 | €750,000 | €555,555 | €900,000 |
15 | 1,000,000 DM (€511,291.88) | €1,000,000 | €2,000,000 | €1,500,000 | €3,000,000 |
Since 2007, there has been a fourth lifeline, called Zusatzjoker ("additional lifeline"). It can be added to the three normal lifelines "Ask the Audience" ("Publikumsjoker"), "Fifty-fifty" ("Fünfzig-fünfzig-Joker") and "Phone-a-Friend" ("Telefonjoker"). When using this lifeline, members of the audience who think to know the answer can stand up and one of them can talk to the contestant after being chosen by them. If the member of the audience gives the right answer, they will win €500. The contestant can follow the chosen person but they don't have to. If the contestant walks away and does not trust the chosen person but the answer is right, the chosen person will nevertheless win €500 because they got the correct answer. The contestant can add this lifeline before the game starts, however if one does so, there will be no guaranteed prize sum of €16,000 upon getting the 10th question correctly. If a contestant chooses the fourth lifeline, they can also phone a person in Germany selected at random (extended Phone-a-Friend lifeline). The contestant can say the gender, age and the town of the person which shall be called. Then, RTL calls to see if the person picks up (after 30 seconds, the phone call will be interrupted.) If the person picks up but does not want to help or cannot help, the phone-a-friend lifeline is considered to be played and is not usable anymore. If the phoned person answers correctly, they will get €500. But the extended phone-a-friend lifeline is only usable with the fourth lifeline. It is an alternative to the normal Phone-a-Friend lifeline. If a contestant has used the extended Phone-a-Friend lifeline, they are not allowed to call one of his previously three selected friends.
These are the questions with which people have won the biggest prize.
1 million DM (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
With whom did Edmund Hillary stand on top of the Mount Everest in 1953? | |
⬥ A: Nasreddin Hodscha | ⬥ B: Nursay Pimsorn |
⬥ C: Tenzing Norgay | ⬥ D: Abrindranath Singh |
1 million DM (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
Which of the two Gibb brothers from the popband The-Bee-Gees are twins? | |
⬥ A: Robin and Barry | ⬥ B: Maurice and Robin |
⬥ C: Barry and Maurice | ⬥ D: Andy and Robin |
Marlene Grabherr died in 2013 at the age of 60.
€1 million (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
Which famous writer, as an architecture graduate, built a pool of water in Zurich? | |
⬥ A: Joseph Roth | ⬥ B: Martin Walser |
⬥ C: Max Frisch | ⬥ D: Friedrich Dürrenmatt |
€1 million (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
Who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1954 and Nobel Peace Prize in 1962? | |
⬥ A: Linus Pauling | ⬥ B: Otto Hahn |
⬥ C: Pearl S. Buck | ⬥ D: Albert Schweitzer |
€1 million (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
Which chemical element makes up more than one half of the mass of the human body? | |
⬥ A: Carbon | ⬥ B: Calcium |
⬥ C: Oxygen | ⬥ D: Iron |
€1 million (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
Which sea is named after a mythological king who is said to have plunged into it? | |
⬥ A: Ionian Sea | ⬥ B: Aegean Sea |
⬥ C: Adriatic Sea | ⬥ D: Caspian Sea |
€1 million (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
The Nagel-Schreckenberg Model provides an explanation for the emergence of...? | |
⬥ A: Desert | ⬥ B: Traffic congestion |
⬥ C: Influenza | ⬥ D: Stock market |
€1 million (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
What was the name of Franz Kafka's last companion, that he met in 1923, one year before his death? | |
⬥ A: Dora Diamant | ⬥ B: Sarah Saphir |
⬥ C: Rita Rubin | ⬥ D: Olga Opal |
€1 million (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
What is the name of the first German postage stamp, which was brought in the kingdom of Bavaria in 1849? | |
⬥ A: Schwarzer Einser (One kreuzer black) | ⬥ B: Roter Zweier (Two kreuzer red) |
⬥ C: Gelber Dreier (Three kreuzer yellow) | ⬥ D: Blauer Vierer (Four kreuzer blue) |
€1 million (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
What is the name of the boy from whose head Wilhelm Tell shoots the legendary apple? | |
⬥ A: Fritz | ⬥ B: Heinrich |
⬥ C: Walter | ⬥ D: August |
€1 million (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
Who should be familiar with the twenty-past-four position? | |
⬥ A: Driving instructor | ⬥ B: Karate master |
⬥ C: Waiter | ⬥ D: Agricultural architect |
€1 million (11 of 11) – no time limit | |
The distance from the German capital Berlin to the center of the Earth is approximately the same as that between Berlin and...? | |
⬥ A: Tokyo | ⬥ B: Cape Town |
⬥ C: Moscow | ⬥ D: New York |
€1,538,450 (3rd/4th/5th head-to-head question out of 5) – 5 seconds | |
Which of these instrument names is an abbreviation? | |
⬥ A: Violin | ⬥ B: Cello |
⬥ C: Double bass | ⬥ D: Guitar |
€1 million (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
How many cubes does the cube designed by Ernö Rubik consist of? | |
⬥ A: 22 | ⬥ B: 24 |
⬥ C: 26 | ⬥ D: 28 |
€1 million (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
Which fairtytale by the Brothers Grimm does not begin with the words "Once upon a time..."? | |
⬥ A: Rumpelstiltskin | ⬥ B: Hans in Luck |
⬥ C: The Star Money | ⬥ D: Little Red Riding Hood |
Question from 2002 |
€1 million (15 of 15) – no time limit | |
The classic, standardized EUR-pallet EPAL1 consists of 78 nails, nine blocks and how many boards? | |
⬥ A: Nine | ⬥ B: Ten |
⬥ C: Eleven | ⬥ D: Twelve |
€1 million (11 of 11) – no time limit | |
What was invented within a radius of 20 kilometres within 5 years? | |
⬥ A: Otto engine & Diesel engine | ⬥ B: Basketball & Volleyball |
⬥ C: Gyros Pita & Doner Kebap | ⬥ D: Toothbrush & Toothpaste |
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.