| | How Much Is Enough? (2008)The general premise of the show is to avoid being the greediest player. For each money clock played, a dollar figure is shown that rapidly increases or decreases. Players hold lock-out buzzers behind their backs and secretly lock in at a point when they believe the money clock is high enough to be valuable to them, but low enough not to be the "greediest" player (the one who locks in at the highest value). For each of the five money clocks, the greediest player banks no money. For the final clock, the most cautious (lowest value) player also banks nothing. The remaining players for each clock bank the value they locked in at. After the five money clocks, the two players with the most money banked go to the final face-off. The players scores are added together and become the top value for the Final Money Clock. The clock counts up from $0 and the first player to lock in wins the value shown on the clock. The other player wins nothing. Theoretically, the highest score a player can score is $29,994. (the absolute second highest number on each round).
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