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To Game The System Or To Dismantle It?

Among other questions

Marti Purull
3 min readSep 28, 2022
hundreds of people gather in the town square to play a 1980s TV gameshow, futuristic neon style — by DALL·E

I don’t believe in gaming systems, but I am convinced there are some systems that we should utterly dismantle.

Mr Larsson’s Victory

In the 1980s in America, a man named Mr Larsson decided to decipher the mechanics of a TV contest. He bought several screens and VHS players to watch several shows at once. After much back and forward rewinding, he spotted patterns behind the seemingly random and rapid ways the prize squares were selected. If you have heard the expression ‘big money, no whammies’, I believe this is the show it originated from. Most boxes held diverse and sumptuous prizes, while others threatened the player with the terrifying chance of losing any accumulated wealth. The participants would press a buzzer to stop the bouncing selector and hope they would land on the money.

Our protagonist had no use for hope. Instead, he spotted five different patterns in which the selector moved; then, it was a matter of pressing the buzzer after the right amount of seconds had passed. By today’s standards, the method is simple enough to make us laugh, but one had to be rather perceptive to see beyond the unquestionable magic of TV at the time. Mr Larsson made so much more money than any previous contestants that the prize could hardly fit in the score display. He had…

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Marti Purull
Marti Purull

Written by Marti Purull

I’m a musician, but I think every day. So I write every day. Thoughts. Reflections. Life.

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