The Bonus Round is that part of a Game Show which follows the main game, typically played by the player or team who won the main game. Usually, this is where the real money/prizes are handed out, with only a token amount of cash given to the winner of the main game. Quite often, a Progressive Jackpot will be involved.
Serendipity Writes the Plot is the main reason this game mechanic is so common. Game shows obviously do not have the budget to be giving away huge jackpots every episode; these productions are typically budgeted with an assumed average per-episode winning in mind. The Bonus Round thus acts as something of a failsafe, giving contestants a final extra-difficult test they must pass to win big and reducing the chance that the show will need to pay out in any given episode.
Examples from real game shows:
- The Italian game Avanti Un Altro has a bonus round which is just plain diabolical: you have 2 minutes and 30 seconds to answer 21 questions wrong. They have two options each, but if you get one right or take too long to answer you have to go right back to the beginning! You do get additional time to play for a smaller prize if you run out of time, but still.
- The Big Wheel on The Big Spin.
- The "(Super) Gold Rush" on Blockbusters. The name was changed to "Gold Run" halfway through the original series' run, for unknown reasons.
- Bob's Full House:
- The "Golden Card Game" was a speed round where the contestant had to get answers correct in 60 seconds to reveal spaces on the board, containing either letters spelling the name of a location (revealing all the letters awarded a trip; failing to do so awarded a Consolation Prize vaguely related to it), or amounts of money (which were won regardless of outcome).
- A few of the revivals, including Lucky Numbers and the U.S. syndicated version Trump Card, utilized a clone of the aforementioned Super Jeopardy! bonus round. The last British revival, The Biggest Game in Town, had a round where the winner had to answer questions in 45 seconds to fill in the digits of £50, £500, and £5,000 in order — winning the values of whatever they filled in (i.e. if they only answered five correctly, they'd win £550.
- BOOM! features an optional one in the Mega Money Bomb, which can quadruple a team's winnings; it is optional due to the fact that if a team goes for it and loses, their winnings are cut in half.
- The "most exciting fun-filled bonus game" in the "Prize Vault"... and then the less exciting "Master Puzzle" on Break the Bank (1985).
- "Money Cards" on Card Sharks.
- Double-or-Nothing Video Bonus on Cash Cab.
- The Chase has the All or Nothing "Final Chase".
- ChildsPlay had two: "Triple Play" featured the contestant guessing a word based on three different definitions from children. Later on, it was replaced by "Turnabout", which was simply Pyramid WITH KIDS! (i.e. having to explain words to children to get them to guess it).
- "Double Play" on the Jack Narz version of Concentration, and the Car Game on the Trebek version.
- "Channel Roulette" on Couch Potatoes.
- Inverted on Distraction. The player is awarded either a car or several bonus prizes at the outset, but must answer a series of questions in order to prevent them from being damaged or destroyed. Once the round is over, the player takes home the prizes in whatever condition they are in at the end of the game (smashed, blown up, vandalized, etc.).
- The Obstacle Course on Double Dare, and "The Spoilers" on the Alex Trebek version of Double Dare.
- The UK version of Duel gave contestants who won 2 consecutive Duels a bonus question for £10,000, and another for £20,000 if they won a third Duel. Also a rare example of a Bonus Round which did not offer the big money; the jackpot was won by winning four Duels in a row.
- "Fast Money" on Family Feud, played by two members of the winning family.
- El gran juego de la oca: La Reoca, in which a player had one week to complete a final mission outside the studio to win the car.
- Jeopardy!:
- If only one player finishes Double Jeopardy! with a positive score, Final Jeopardy! effectively becomes this. The player simply wagers any amount of their score on a clue that they answer alone. Regardless of whether or not the response is correct, the player is guaranteed the win- unless they wager everything and get it wrong. ($0 is never a winning score.)
- The Art Fleming NBC revival in 1978 had an actual bonus round for the champion known as "Super Jeopardy!" (unrelated to ABC's primetime Tournament of Champions of the same name): similarly to the aforementioned "Gold Run" of Blockbusters (but preceding it by two years), the contestant was given a five-by-five board of clues, and had to get a line of five correct responses in a row. Three wrong responses ended the game.
- "Face the Devil" on The Joker's Wild.
- The Temple Run on Legends of the Hidden Temple.
- Let's Make a Deal:
- "The Big Deal (of The Day)" is an inversion, as the big winner (or, if the big winner passes, one of the next in line) has to surrender their original winnings to play the Big Deal. All they have to do is choose one of the three doors, and they win what's behind it. The doors contain three prizes of increasing value (one of which being the Big Deal itself), but never Zonks. Originally two winners were allowed to play, that is until the current run, where only one person okays, making it an even stricter endgame than before.
- The "Super Deal" on the same functions as a Bonus Bonus Round (The catch? the Big Deal must be won, because if it's not then it's skipped entirely, without a reveal of where it would have been).
- The "Honors Round" on Make the Grade; on a few episodes, a player who won the game early played a second bonus round, entitled the University Round.
- The Audience Match on the original Match Game and the Super Match on versions up to the 2016 revival.
- The Dutch lottery game show Miljoenenjacht, after several rounds of eliminations and quizzes to whittle the audience to one contestant, originally had the winner answer a series of seven multiple choice questions. Each correct answer added a "0" to the end of their prize, for a top prize of 10,000,000 guilder. Later on, they would switch to a new bonus game in which the winning contestant chose one of 26 briefcases containing ascending dollar amounts (hoping it contained the top prize), and then opened the other briefcases to narrow down what could be inside their own, being occasionally given offers as a buyout for their case based on what was inside it.
- "El minuto de oro" ("The Golden Minute") in the weekend edition of Saber y Ganar.
- The "Golden Medley" on Name That Tune.
- The "Video Zone" on Nick Arcade.
- The "Million Dollar Round" on The $1,000,000 Chance of a Lifetime; you had to win the game AND the bonus round three times, without failing at any point, to win the million dollars.
- The "Lightning Round" on Password, the Trope Maker.
- "Alphabetics" on Password Plus. Super Password and Million Dollar Password's bonus rounds had the same name as the series, though "Super Password" became referred to as "the endgame" later in the series' run. The 2022 NBC version somehow just used the term "Bonus Round".
- Pointless has a bonus round before the head-to-head round, where the two remaining couples are given a board of six possible answers, two of which are pointless - as in the normal rounds, finding a pointless answer adds £250 to the prize. Unlike the normal rounds, the two teams are allowed to confer, and an incorrect answer carries no penalty.
- Press Your Luck and its beta version Second Chance (as well as the revival Whammy) had no bonus round. The 2019 revival of PYL, however, did implement one where the main game's winner had a shot to win $1 million through taking spins on the Big Board and avoiding the Whammy.
- The Price Is Right not only has a standard Bonus Round with the Showcase, but also has a "pre-Bonus Round" Bonus Round in the Showcase Showdown (that big wheel).
- The Showcase was played more true to "bonus round" form on the 1994 Davidson incarnation, with one player playing a special version of the Range Game for a single, usually massive Showcase. This style of Showcase was adopted by many of the European versions that sprang up after The New Price is Right got canned (including Bruce Forsyth's UK version), albeit with the contestant simply stating their bid as normal rather than using the Range Game board.
- The nighttime version of the original Price had contestants who won certain items up for bids either winning a bonus prize or competing in separate contests to win bonus cash or prizes.
- It could be convincingly argued that the Showcase is actually a competitive apex that the first 40 minutes of show has been building toward, like a price-guessing Super Bowl, but it does fit on this list by virtue of being a chance for people who've already won to win even more.
- The "Winners' Circle" on The $10,000 Pyramid (and its subsequent versions).
- Remote Control had two: an identify-the-music-video round on the MTV version, and the "Wheel of Jeopardy" in the syndicated run.
- The Sprint round on Scrabble (and later, the "Bonus Sprint").
- "Shop 'Til They Drop" on Shop 'Til You Drop.
- Showoffs and its reboot Body Language had contestants trying to guess up to ten words being mimed to them in sixty seconds. Whatever was correctly guessed was worth up to 10 times the amount by getting three additional words in 15 seconds (20 in Body Language).
- The "Bonus Sweep" on Supermarket Sweep.
- The Locker Room on Think Fast.
- Tokyo Friend Park 2 had a variant: If a team successfully wins a game early, they're often allowed to use their remaining tries or time to try and reach an even harder goal (usually double the original goal, or a Flawless Victory if the goal was more than half the maximum possible). A success doubles their winnings from the game, with no penalty for failure. In some games, it's even possible to win that early, and earn a chance to go for triple and up (and a triple win has been pulled off at least once).
- The "(Big Money) Bonus Round" on Wheel of Fortune.
- The German version, Glücksrad, had an interesting pre-bonus round. The Super-spiel
was a 4-5 word Crossword Puzzle using the board that all three players played as a team. Each player picks two letters, and then they have 90 seconds (each player as captain for 30) to solve the puzzle. If they cleared the wall in time, they all got a share of a rolling jackpot (which in some cases was worth more than the actual Bonus Round win). Then the normal Bonus Round's played like usual.
- The German version, Glücksrad, had an interesting pre-bonus round. The Super-spiel
- The Map on Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?, later replaced by The Gates of History on Where in Time is Carmen Sandiego?.
- The "Gauntlet of Villains" on Whew!!
- The "Best of Ten Test of Knowledge" on Win Ben Stein's Money, where the winning contestant from the previous two rounds goes up against Ben himself for the show's full prize of $5,000.
- The "Wonderwall" on Winning Lines.
- "Double Definition" on Wordplay.
- "Jack Attack" in You Don't Know Jack.
- The bonus board on the original You Don't Say! had three clues to a name for a cash prize. If a contestant won a game by a 3-0 score, the prize for getting the name on the first clue was a new car. On the 1975 revival, there was no board; the contestant gave clues to the celebrities. If a contestant could get the celebrity chosen to get four names in five clues, it was worth $5,000. Getting five names in five clues doubled it.
- Many Japanese variety shows have an inversion of this trope called the "Batsu game" (罰ゲーム, penalty game), where the loser has to play a game that involves doing or experiencing something unpleasant as "punishment" for losing.
- Then there's Panel Quiz Attack 25, which plays it straight: however many panels the winner captured during the main game were removed from the board, revealing a series of pictures underneath. These are visual clues that led to the name of a person, place, or even a year (where the clues would be events that happened during that year). Identifying the subject of the clues won a trip (these days, it's a Mediterranean cruise).
Examples from fictional game shows:
- In Dave Barry Slept Here, Abraham Lincoln became a contestant in The Lincoln-Douglas Debates, where he won the bonus round by answering the question "How much is four score plus seven?" This awarded him the Samsonite luggage and the presidency. John F. Kennedy wins the same prize in his televised debates with Nixon; the category chosen by Kennedy in the bonus round was "Graceful Handsome Boyish Wittiness."
- In Garfield and Friends, the Dream Sequence game show "Name that Fish" had a bonus round in which Garfield (or presumably, any contestant) gets into a booth that starts filling with water, and is challenged to name the fish that come in with it (Never seen played because Garfield realized it was All Just a Dream).
- The kids-versus-adults game "What Do Kids Know?" in Magnolia had a bonus round. Everyone expects Child Prodigy Stanley to represent the kids in the bonus round but he doesn't want to go because he has to go to the bathroom.
- In Monty Python's Flying Circus, Karl Marx, having advanced to the third round of World Forum, whose first two rounds have been mostly about Footy Leagues, has to answer three questions correctly to win the special prize. He has no problems answering the first two questions ("The development of the industrial proletariat is conditioned by what other development?" and "The struggle of class against class is a what struggle?") but is stumped by the third:
Presenter: Your final question: Who won the FA Cup in 1949?
Karl Marx: Uh, the workers' control of means of production? The struggle of the urban proletariat?
Presenter: No, it was Wolverhampton Wanderers who beat Leicester 3-1. - In Once Upon a Mattress, the Wizard tells Princess #12 that she's now at "the seventh plateau," and gives her a final question to answer in the Engagement Challenge. Predictably, the princess fails to answer the absurdly convoluted fourth part of the question before the time runs out, and she receives a large dead bird as a Consolation Prize. (The show was written in the wake of the quiz show scandals of the late 1950s.)
