Click

Host: Ryan Seacrest
Announcer/Co-host: Amber Bonasso, Amber Willenborg

PREMISE: Teens answer easy questions in an internet-themed game.

PLAY: In round one, each of the three teams gets one minute alone at the "Mouse." Clicking the mouse stopped the reticle on the video wall on one of 16 squares. Some questions were categorical general knowledge, and were answered at the mouse. Others were answered at the "Word Wizard" and had to do with grammar, spelling, and so forth, or the "Chat Room," where contestants had to figure out who was online from clues given. Questions answered correctly won $25 or $50, except for the "Double Click" which would double a teams' winnings at that point.

Round two gave the trailing team a chance at the mouse. The team continued to play until they missed a question (which was then tossed up for the other teams) or they hit "Crash" which ended their turn if another team could answer a general knowledge question. This round continued for five minutes.

Round three gave control of the mouse to Ryan, who randomly picked the mother board, word wizard, or chat room. One member of each team was stationed at a site, and could win $100 by answering a question. If the contestant could not answer, the partners at the podiums could jump in. After some questions, the partners traded places. The team with the most money kept their winnings and played the bonus level.

BONUS: In the bonus level, the team had :45 to answer three $100 questions correctly to win a computer from Monorail.

Season Two Changes
The Double Click now doubles the value of the next question.
The categories are "Word Wizard," "Web Site," and "Chat Room." Each one has it's own station that the team must run to, there is no Mother Board station.
Round two featured a "virus" instead of 'crash,' but it did the same thing, steal control away.
In round three, Ryan now has his back to the board when he clicks.
To win the bonus round, the team must give three consecutive right answers within one minute to win the computer. Right answers are still worth $100 each no matter what.