Difference between revisions of "30-20-10 bonuses"

From QBWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "A '''30-20-10 bonus''' is a bonus in which the moderator reads one clue or set of clues and the controlling team has a chance to answer. If the team is correct, they recei...")
 
(simple and more concise)
Line 1: Line 1:
A '''30-20-10 bonus''' is a [[bonus]] in which the moderator reads one clue or set of clues and the controlling team has a chance to answer. If the team is correct, they receive 30 points. Otherwise, the moderator reads another clue or set of clues and the controlling team has a chance to answer for 20 points. If the team is incorrect, the moderator reads a final clue or set of clues and the controlling team has a chance to answer for 10 points. If the team is incorrect, they receive no points and the game continues with the next tossup (or, if the bonus was for the last tossup, the game ends). They were used in [[NAQT]] questions until about 2009.
+
A '''30-20-10 bonus''' is a [[bonus]] in which the moderator reads one clue or set of clues and the controlling team has a chance to answer. If the team is correct, they receive 30 points. Otherwise, the moderator reads another clue or set of clues and the controlling team has a chance to answer for 20 points. If the team is incorrect, the moderator reads a final clue or set of clues and the controlling team has a chance to answer for 10 points. If the team is incorrect, they receive no points and the bonus ends. They were used in [[NAQT]] questions until about 2009.
  
 
This structure is intended to match [[pyramidality]] in the sense that the hardest clue(s) should go first and thus be worth 30 points, the intermediate clue(s) should go in the middle and thus be worth 20 points, and the easiest clue(s) should go last and only be worth 10 points, but question writers generally now prefer to use the same clues in the same order but as a pyramidal [[tossup]].
 
This structure is intended to match [[pyramidality]] in the sense that the hardest clue(s) should go first and thus be worth 30 points, the intermediate clue(s) should go in the middle and thus be worth 20 points, and the easiest clue(s) should go last and only be worth 10 points, but question writers generally now prefer to use the same clues in the same order but as a pyramidal [[tossup]].

Revision as of 16:16, 20 December 2017

A 30-20-10 bonus is a bonus in which the moderator reads one clue or set of clues and the controlling team has a chance to answer. If the team is correct, they receive 30 points. Otherwise, the moderator reads another clue or set of clues and the controlling team has a chance to answer for 20 points. If the team is incorrect, the moderator reads a final clue or set of clues and the controlling team has a chance to answer for 10 points. If the team is incorrect, they receive no points and the bonus ends. They were used in NAQT questions until about 2009.

This structure is intended to match pyramidality in the sense that the hardest clue(s) should go first and thus be worth 30 points, the intermediate clue(s) should go in the middle and thus be worth 20 points, and the easiest clue(s) should go last and only be worth 10 points, but question writers generally now prefer to use the same clues in the same order but as a pyramidal tossup.