Mental Samurai

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Mental Samurai
Mentalsamuraifox.jpg
Mental Samurai Poster
GenreGame show
Created by
Directed byRich DiPirro
Presented byRob Lowe
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes19
Production
Executive producers
ProducerRob Lowe
Production locations
Camera setupMulti-camera setup
Production companies
  • A. Smith & Co. Productions
  • Apploff Entertainment
  • Warner Horizon Unscripted Television[a]
Release
Original networkFox
Picture format720p (HDTV)
Original releaseMarch 19, 2019 (2019-03-19) –
present
External links
fox.com/mental-samurai

Mental Samurai is an American television game show of intelligence and mental agility that premiered on March 19, 2019 on Fox. Described as an "obstacle course for the mind", the show features contestants answering knowledge-based questions while being moved around by a large robot arm in the show's specially designed capsule that can rotate 360°. The show is hosted and produced by Rob Lowe.[1][2][3]

On February 25, 2020, it was announced that the second season was set to premiere on April 22, 2020.[4] However, due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the second season was postponed to May 25, 2021 and reruns of the first season aired in its place.[5]

Gameplay[]

The core gameplay is divided into two rounds: Towers of Samurai and Circle of Samurai. Contestants are tasked with qualifying through the Towers of Samurai round to play the Circle of Samurai round. Any incorrect answer during either will end the round.

Towers of Samurai (Season 1)[]

The game consists of two rounds, with one contestant at a time answering questions from within a movable capsule, named Ava. The questions are asked on four screens ("towers"), each focusing on a different skill: Knowledge, Puzzles, Sequences, and Memory. If the contestant answers any question wrong in the first round or runs out of time, he/she is eliminated. If the contestant answers all of the questions correctly, he/she wins $10,000 and advances to the next round for a chance to win a top prize of $100,000.

Towers of Samurai (Season 2)[]

Starting with season 2, there have been several changes to how Mental Samurai is played.

Instead of contestants answering 12 questions correctly to move on, the format has changed to a head to head battle where contestants have a 5 minute time limit to try and answer the most questions in the fastest time or to answer all 10.

Contestants are not eliminated immediately for answering a question incorrectly. Instead, the first contestant who manages to answer at least 1 question correctly becomes the "Reigning Samurai" and sets the pace/score for the next contestants to beat. If any of the remaining contestants, including the previous week's winner, manage to beat the Reigning Samurai's time or answers more questions than the previous contestant, then they become the new Reigning Samurai. After all contestants have had their chance, the Reigning Samurai moves on to the Circle of Samurai for a chance at $100,000.

For every question a contestant answers correctly, they earn $500. If a contestant answers all 10 questions correctly, their prize money will be doubled to $10,000. Regardless of who moves on to the next round, each contestant keeps the money they earned.

Circle of Samurai (Season 1 Format)[]

This round consists of up to four questions, one at each tower, in the same manner; 90 seconds are allowed, plus any time remaining from the first round (rounded to the nearest second). The first correct answer augments the contestant's winnings to $25,000, and each subsequent answer adds a further $25,000, for a maximum of $100,000 if the contestant answers all four questions correctly. A miss at any time ends the round, but the contestant leaves with whatever money they have won to that point.

Correct
questions
Prize
0 $10,000
1 $25,000
2 $50,000
3 $75,000
4 $100,000

Circle of Samurai (Season 2)[]

The game is played similar to Season 1, except that contestants are tasked with answering ten questions (at random from all four towers) for $2,500 each. If a contestant answers all ten questions correct, their winnings in the round will be quadrupled to $100,000. An incorrect answer will end the round but the contestant will receive all money won to that point. Additionally, the contestant will return the following episode (whether they answered all ten or not), to face the Reigning Samurai of that week's episode for a chance to return to the Circle of Samurai again.

Towers of Samurai Mini-Games[]

The exact order or designation of the Towers of Samurai is randomly drawn. In the "Towers of Samurai" and the second season "Circle of Samurai" round, it is expected that players will visit each "Tower" at least once but some towers may repeat. In the "Circle of Samurai" from season 1, the contestant will play one question at each tower.

The Tower of Knowledge[]

  • Factfinder: The contestant must decide which answer is true based on common knowledge.
  • Initial Impression: The contestant must combine two people to make
  • Reality Check: The contestant must figure out which image is the correct representation.
  • Snapshot: The contestant must figure out a person, place or thing by combining two/three images.
  • Special Equation: The contestant must count the number of two things together to make an equation and say the answer.
  • Spellbound: The contestant must spell the correct answer to the question.
  • Toss Up: The contestant must answer a common knowledge fact.
  • True Lies: The contestant must answer a True/False question correctly.

The Tower of Puzzles[]

  • Compound Fracture: The contestant must identify the word that completes two compound words.
  • Double Crossed: The contestant must complete a crossword puzzle to identify a common name, item, or phrase.
  • Gridlock: The contestant must identify three things in common in a word search.
  • Match Box: The contestant must identify how many matching pairs are in a pool of images.
  • Mirror Mirror: The contestant must identify the mirror image of the image above.
  • Missing Piece: The contestant must complete a puzzle by locating the missing piece that fits.
  • Oddball: The contestant must identify the image that's not identical to the others.
  • Picture Perfect: The contestant must identify a common phrase based on an image that they see.
  • Wordnado: The contestant must combine letter fragments to make a word.
  • Wordplay: The contestant must unscramble a set of letters to make a common name.

The Tower of Sequence[]

  • Alpha Order: The contestant must list the names of people/things in alphabetical order from first to last, or vice versa.
  • Back Order: The contestant must list the words in a common message in a specific order.
  • Measure Up: The contestant must measure three measurements shown from shortest to longest, or vice versa.
  • Record-Breaker: The contestant must sort the list of items by age.
  • Striking Distance: The contestant must arrange the places in a certain direction or by distance.
  • Time Warp: The contestant must arrange a list of items chronologically.

The Tower of Memory[]

  • Blackout: The contestant must study a clip carefully and answer a question about it.
  • Chat Attack: The contestant must study a text message and answer a question about it.
  • Echo Chamber: The contestant must repeat a pattern that they hear based on three images.
  • Hear Say: The contestant must listen to a series of sounds and answer a question about them.
  • Mind Field: The contestant must study six images carefully and locate the one image shown.
  • Name Dropper: The contestant must memorize the names featured in an image and identify the name of the person shown.
  • Pay Attention: The contestant must listen to a message and answer a question about it.

Tournament format (Season 1)[]

The best-performing contestants in the first season, including some who fail to win the $100,000 on their original episode, returned in the final episode of the season to compete in a tournament for a grand prize of $250,000 and the title "Mental Samurai". Ranking for the tournament is determined by how many questions a contestant got correct in the shortest amount of time.

Towers of Samurai Final[]

In the tournament final, much like the preliminary episodes, the finalists will complete a Towers of Samurai round. However, unlike previous shows, the finalists will each face the same 12 questions in the same order. (All contestants are sequestered away and are not aware of the proceedings until it is their turn to play.) The top three finishing players (determined by most questions answered correctly and ties being broken by fastest time) will advance the Circle of Samurai final.[6]

Circle of Samurai Final[]

The top three players from the Towers of Samurai Final will play in the Circle of Samurai final. Each of the contestants qualifying for the Circle of Samurai will face off answering the same set of questions (in the same order). Again, each contestant is sequestered backstage and unaware of the proceedings. Unlike the regular episodes, each contestant is only given 90 seconds to complete the four questions (regardless of how much time was left in the Towers of Samurai). The contestant who answers the most questions correctly, in the shortest amount of time, will be deemed the champion and wins the $250,000 prize.[6]

Ratings[]

Season 1[]

# Air Date Rating/share
(18-49)
Viewers
(millions)
DVR
(18-49)
DVR viewers
(millions)
Total
(18-49)
Total viewers
(millions)
Source
1 March 19, 2019 0.7/3 2.20 0.1 0.55 0.8 2.75 [7][8]
2 March 26, 2019 0.6/3 1.98 0.1 0.34 0.7 2.32 [9][10]
3 April 2, 2019 0.6/3 1.85 0.1 0.31 0.7 2.15 [11][12]
4 April 9, 2019 0.5/3 1.84 0.1 0.31 0.6 2.15 [13][14]
5 April 16, 2019 0.5/2 1.68 0.1 0.31 0.6 1.98 [15][16]
6 April 23, 2019 0.5/3 1.77 0.1 0.26 0.6 2.04 [17][18]
7 April 30, 2019 0.6/3 1.75 0.1 0.26 0.6 2.01 [19][20]
8 May 7, 2019 0.5/2 1.66 0.0 0.26 0.5 1.91 [21][22]
9 May 14, 2019 0.4/2 1.39 0.0 0.25 0.4 1.64 [23][24]
10 May 21, 2019 0.4/2 1.58 0.1 0.23 0.5 1.81 [25][26]

Season 2[]

# Air Date Rating
(18-49)
Viewers
(millions)
DVR
(18-49)
DVR viewers
(millions)
Total
(18-49)
Total viewers
(millions)
Source
1 May 25, 2021 0.2 1.17 0.1 0.33 0.3 1.50 [27]
2 June 1, 2021 0.3 1.13 0.1 0.37 0.4 1.49 [28]
3 June 8, 2021 0.3 1.22 0.1 0.33 0.4 1.55 [29]
4 June 15, 2021 0.3 1.35 0.1 0.32 0.4 1.67 [30]
5 June 22, 2021 0.3 1.12 0.1 0.34 0.4 1.45 [31]
6 June 24, 2021 0.4 1.56 0.1 0.30 0.4 1.86 [32]
7 June 29, 2021 0.3 1.15 0.1 0.32 0.3 1.46 [33]
8 July 6, 2021 0.3 1.05 0.1 0.34 0.3 1.39 [34]
9 July 20, 2021 0.3 1.04 0.0 0.26 0.3 1.29 [35]

International versions[]

The international rights are distributed by Warner Bros. International Television Production.

Legend:
  Currently airing  
  Ended  
  Upcoming version  

Country Local title Host(s) Network Date aired Top Prize
 Arab World Mental Samurai Bil Arabi Ammar Al-Rahma Dubai TV March 14, 2020 – present 50.000 Dhs
 Chile Mental Samurai Chile Rafael Araneda Chilevisión 2022 $340.000.000
 Colombia Mental Samurai Colombia Agmeth Escaf Caracol Televisión 2022 $700.000.000
 Finland Mental Samurai Suomi[36] Ellen Jokikunnas Nelonen February 22, 2020 – present 30.000
 Portugal Mental Samurai Portugal[37] Pedro Teixeira TVI October 29, 2019 – present 50.000

Notes[]

  1. ^ Known as Warner Horizon Television until 2020

References[]

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  2. ^ Otterson, Joe (August 2, 2018). "Fox Orders Competition Series 'Mental Samurai' Hosted by Rob Lowe". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on August 2, 2018. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
  3. ^ ""Mental Samurai," The First-Ever Obstacle Course for the Mind, Hosted and Produced by Rob Lowe, to Premiere Tuesday, February 26, on FOX". The Futon Critic. January 9, 2019. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
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  5. ^ "Fox Sets Summer Dates: LEGO Masters, Beat Shazam, Hell's Kitchen: Young Guns, Fantasy Island Reboot and More". TVLine. April 7, 2021.
  6. ^ a b "The Grand Championship". Mental Samurai. Season 1. Episode 10. FOX. Archived from the original on 2019-06-01. Retrieved 2019-06-01.
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  36. ^ "Mental Samurai Suomi". Retrieved 2020-02-02.
  37. ^ "Mental Samurai estreia esta noite. Será que Pedro Teixeira vai conseguir "mudar tudo"?". 26 October 2019. Archived from the original on 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2020-01-12.

External links[]

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