Show Me What You've Got (Dryicor)

Näytä mihin pystyt (English: Show Me What You've Got) is an upcoming Dryicoran quiz show to be broadcast on DTV from February 2021. Presented by game show veteran Reginald Walston, the show will challenge contestants to answer questions to find large sums of money. Its 8 160 000 Kr top prize (worth over US$11m) will be the second-largest quiz show jackpot in Dryicoran history, second only to the infamous Shafted 104 200 000 Kr jackpot.

The show was adapted into the infamous flop  in 2007, when  had a jive with thirteen "million-dollar dancers", however DTV chief executive Erno Torkelsen promised that it would be played differently and with less emphasis on "dancers" which, in the Dryicoran version, are replaced with models.

Gameplay
The show is signalled by three bell rings. After an opening monologue from Walston, a short title interlude plays before twelve models with briefcases, six male and six female, each representing a star sign, enter the in-the-round set, a direct import of the Italian one. The dancers, socially distanced of course, then walk around into towers three floors high. Connecting two towers is a bridge on the second storey reading "Show Me What You've Got", under which is a counter with the amount given away over the course of the programme's history and then the host entrance.

First round
On the game board there are 12 cash amounts, 5 "addition cubes" and 5 "subtraction cubes". They must use each cube once. They can either subtract or add the money to their game total. When the contestant uses a cube, they must pick one of the twelve star signs and when asked by Walston to "Show Me What You've Got", they will take the scroll next to them and unravel it. The amount shown will be either added or subtracted to or from the total. After the contestant has used up all 10 cubes, if they have something to play with, they go into the next round.

Second Round
This round is the same except instead of cash amounts there are numbers and instead of addition and subtraction cubes there are "multiplication cubes" and "division cubes". The premise of the game is the same: pick 10 numbers, but instead you must answer questions. The first part is given to you in a Shafted-style format, with part of the question given to the contestant first of all, before they can pick one of three unknown options to complete the question, which they must answer. If they do not know the answer, they can pick another question but they can only do so once per round. After the contestant locks in their answer, the other options are quickly explored.

It is worth noting that the contestant must play out the full game: they cannot walk away part of the way through. After the contestant has answered, if they have answered correctly they pick a sign and multiply or divide. If they answer wrongly, they do not play more. Unlike the UK pilot version on which the show was based, the show finishes after all 10 of these second round cubes are used, not after the end of one operation.