When the show moved to the new Nickelodeon Studios in Orlando, Florida, for season 2, Carrington was replaced by Skip Lackey.
While Eoppolo was invited to stay on as announcer, he was contractually obligated to another project by that time, and was replaced by Henry J. Waleczko.
In both seasons, it was possible for some events to end in a draw, whether by both teams failing to complete a stunt, or by a tie score.
If nobody solved the Brain Bender after the final event, or if a tie occurs at the end of the game, a sudden death showdown was played.
The highest a team has ever won was $600(2 in the Carrington era with both brain benders and 1 in the Lackey with 1 brain bender and a bonus 6th event) The team with the most money at the end of the game won and advanced to the bonus round, the Locker Room.
The Locker Room contained fifteen large lockers, each containing either a costumed character that distracted the contestants by bombarding them with sometimes messy surprises, or a number of themed objects (rubber balls, balloons, or small props which flew out, for example).
At that point, the contestant had to "yank on the Herring Handle", a cord suspended in the center of the room; the team did not get credit for a match, but they were then able to continue to the next character.
When this handle was pulled, a bucket of red plastic fish toys was dropped on the character while his/her door was being locked.
The series was, like all of Nickelodeon's early game shows, taped at WHYY-TV in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for its first season.
The show relocated to the soon-to-be-opened Universal Studios Florida in Orlando for season 1, where the set received a makeover.
The Orlando episodes of the show were taped in January 1990, 5 months before Nickelodeon Studios, as well as the rest of Universal Studios Florida, officially opened, and was the second Nickelodeon game show to tape there (Super Sloppy Double Dare was the first).