I think this is the best deal or no deal episode ever I really enjoyed watching this again when I first saw this episode I was 6 years old and I just remember the excitement. This was amazing. 🙂
Suzanne Mulholland's game was very memorable for lots of reasons, but the most important ones are keeping the 2 biggest boxes (£100,000 and £250,000) on "Live Play" and to make matters better she became the 3rd winner on the British version after Laura Pearce and Alice Munday.
Suzanne was only given reasonable offers when guaranteed £35,000. £30,000 was absolutely horrendous- should have been at very least £50,000. I don't think she would have turned it down either.
Technically, £30,000 would be nice. However, with almost the entire Power Five on the board (As you can see, Suzanne has taken out the £75,000 in the 2nd Round) it's definitely a terrible move from that Stupid Banker.
@@sergioroman2920 yeah it was very low risk as she had one box at a time also. I think 99% of anyone playing game would have made same decision. The other offers were brave to decline though so fair play :) it was one of easier ones like the first male quarter millionaire. I think Nong was the first one that had to be particularly brave though.
@@sergioroman2920 I think the Banker made that offer in part because Michael got a similarly poor offer on a golden 5 box board earlier in the week and he actually dealt it (£24,000 on a £10k/£20k/£50k/£75k/£100k board)!
When you have a 5 box as powerful as Suzanne did, mind games and manipulation are practically useless. The only thing which will force a deal is a very chunky offer. The £30,000 seems like an offer with very little risk if you turn it down because the only way the offer would decrease is if you take out the quarter mil. I’d have pitched at £54,000 because then there seems like you’re in for a major drop if the next box goes wrong.
this was to me the first genuine 250k win the gimmick bankers gamble with alice on 17k was imo a shamefully easy way to set up a win and Laura the first again it felt desperate 45k on a 250k and 3k board when up to that point the banker had never gone that low before in that situation before hand they wanted her to go on. No shade on laura and Alice they took advantage and bagged it but this felt like the first legit 250k win that was unforced.
This £250,000 win was FAR more manufactured than Laura's and nearly as manufactured Alice's. Suzanne was given unusually low offers for the board throughout, ESPECIALLY that £30,000 5 box offer, plus the Banker made the 5 box twist super easy for her so she was pretty much guaranteed to get one box at a time. Laura had to turn down good offers on a precarious board throughout in conventional play, and the only poor offer she got was he final one of £45,000, and even then it was a tricky decision to make with such a tiny fallback of £3,000 in comparison to the offer.
@@bencalebrod He went low early hoping the game would collapse in live play, but it never did and by the time the Banker realized, Susanne had her eyes on the confetti. I would have said the £75,000 £110,000 and £165,000 were decent offers.
@@classicsportclassictiyl8547 Agreed, as circumstances turned out, 5 box was the last real chance to get a deal. Banker needed to offer at least £40,000 to get her to go. So at the very least he was £10,000 off the mark.
48:00 the wanted poster of Suzanne! Reward £250,000, but she earned that money and doesn’t deserve to be on a wanted poster the banker does! Wanted! Banker! Reward £250,000