Games
- Captain Bones: The skeleton pirate Captain Bones uses his bones to make puzzles to save him 'from going stark ravin' mad.' Many puzzles consist of incorrect math problems that need to be solved (e.g. 1 + 1 = 3 changes to 1 + 1 = 2 by moving one bone on the 3) or puzzles that need to be arranged to make another image (e.g. 5 squares need to be changed to 4 squares).
- Dirty Pictures: Similar to Haunted House Party, the viewer must figure out who the most well-known person is by watching parts of a picture in a museum dusted off by a maid and reading the museum keeper's cue cards.
- Distraction News: In this recurring game of staying focused, Dora Smarmy, the cardboard cut-out anchorperson, tells the news of a particular topic while nonsensical distractions run amok onscreen. After talking about the topic, she asks the viewers five questions about the topic.
- Ear We Are: In this game, the viewers need to listen to sounds and figure out what thing or place two different disembodied human ears are thinking about. This game rarely appeared in the series. When it did, it would usually be the last game.
- Eddie Bull: At the Walla-Walla Washington Zoo, a boy named Eddie Bull (a pun on 'edible'), is swallowed whole by an unseen animal and gives the viewers clues (trivial facts about an animal) to have them figure out what animal swallowed him alive. After he tells the viewer what the animal is, he manages to come out alive in the end, usually due to 'going back the way (he) came'.
- Haunted House Party: At a haunted house party, a famous dead person is the special guest whose silhouette is seen through windows. The viewers have to listen to the person's historical facts and figure out who he/she is. Right before the person reveals who they are, the narrator stops him/her and recaps on the facts about that person.
- Lens McCracken: In order to figure out what happened in a crime scene, a bumbling, self-proclaimed 'ace' photo snoop named Lens McCracken shows the viewers three different things that are zoomed in very closely and has them figure out what those things are. Sometimes they close the episode with this game.
- Mug Shots: Verity Pins, a New Yorkish detective, gets four suspects pinned down for lying and allows the viewers to spot which three are guilty by listening to their lies. The suspect who says something truthful and trivial is innocent.
- Paige and Sage: In one minute, the viewers must find ten differences between two panels. Both panels have the same background, but both Barbie doll girls have the differences in their own panels. This game rarely appeared in the series. When it did, it was usually the last game.
- Poop or Scoop: A sideshow caller, whose arms and cane are only seen, shows four different animals and a fact that relates to each one. If one fact is true, viewers would choose 'SCOOP.' If false, they choose 'POOP.' This was the only game in the series that has rankings on how many questions the viewers answered correctly. If the viewers got only one answer right, the rank is 'Party Pooper', if they got two right, the rank is 'Pooper Scooper', if three, the rank is 'Super Pooper Scooper', if all four questions are answered correctly, the rank is 'Super Duper Pooper Scooper'.
- Psycho Math: Prof. Rocket, the robotic host with a crazy persona, lets viewers solve equations by showing pictures that represent a particular number (e.g. Number of letters of the alphabet = 26, Number of days in a week = 7). Three pictures are placed in the first three boxes with a question mark in the fourth box (e.g. # x # - # = ?). Addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division signs are used randomly. Order of operations is not taken into consideration.
- Radio Scramble: At KBOX, 'Jumpin' Johnny Jumble', an anthropomorphic microphone and radio host, plays tunes to let the viewers figure out what words the jumbled letters really make. The music will always relate to the unscrambled word (for example, if the original, unscrambled word was 'mouse', the tune might be about how a 'soume' kept squeaking). The beginning and end always show off an example of mixing the word 'jumble' (e.g. meljub). In occasions, he disguises himself as another person to broadcast either sports, weather, or traffic.
- Revolting Slob: In every episode, an offscreen female narrator (on the episode when revolting slob gets sick, before the second question, she sneezes and revolting slob offers his germy tissue, that's when her hand is seen. Her skin is white, and she has red fingernails. Also, when revolting slob eats a lot of beans and the narrator want him to eat healthier and puts a box of full grain cereal, that is when her hand is seen again. Her skin is white and has non-colored fingernails.) teaches the viewers three new vocabulary words based on a revolting slob's (literally named the Revolting Slob) behaviors and actions. Multiple choices are given before the correct word is revealed. In the end, one word explained from the third multiple choice section has to do with the Revolting Slob exploding into nothingness, and the narrator closes the episode with 'No slobs (and any other living thing) were harmed in the filming of this show.' Usually, they begin the show with this game.
- Riddle-Snake: After the Riddle-Snake plays a tune which brings up a riddle, viewers are given time to figure out the riddle before a man who never opens his eyes appears and gives the answer. When seen, usually it is the last game they play before the episode ends.
- Sketch Pad: On his sketch pad, an artist named Sketch draws pictures that tell a story and omits a picture so the viewers try to figure out what really happened before the final picture of the story is revealed. The story is usually in the form of a lateral thinking puzzle.
- Ten Seconds: A game where viewers must figure out the answers to a series of Rebus puzzles each within ten seconds. (2nd 2nd 2nd 2nd 2nd 2nd 2nd 2nd 2nd 2nd = Ten Seconds. Hence, the title). Sometimes they close the episode with this game.
- Think Tank: Captain Bob, a Jamaican submarine driver, is stuck in a large fish tank. Before all the water in the tank goes down the drain and the sub reaches the ground, the viewers need to figure out what three given things have in common. Each episode consists of two rounds. This game was played in almost every episode in the series.
- Word Shake: In this game similar to Mad Gab, a French chef takes two to three words together and forms them into another word that sounds like the two to three words (or letters) said together. This game rarely appeared in the series, when it did, they almost always close the episode with this game.
Hbo Crashbox Games Free
HBO Family
HBO Family | Crashbox Episode 40 - YouTube
CRASHBOX, part of HBO Family's after-school lineup, is an animated interactive series that provides brain food for grade-schoolers by engaging them in fun, fast-paced games. Each challenge tests viewers' skills or knowledge in areas such as math, history, grammar, culture, and more. Crashbox was a short-lived educational children's television game show that aired on the digital cable television channel HBO Family where it aimed to educate grade school children in history, math, vocabulary and other various subjects. The show takes place in the insides of a game computer. Crashbox is a Canadian-American educational children's television show that airs on the HBO Family digital cable television channel in the United States and Asia and ran from 1999 to 2000. It aims to educate grade-school children in history, math, vocabulary, and other various subjects. An outrageously insane new game show that kids can play with their TVs, Crashbox serves up a mind-scrambling menu of brain teasers and puzzles, presented by a truly nutty band of crazy, comical characters! House of the Dragon, the prequel to Game of Thrones, is coming to HBO and HBO Max. SEASON 4 PREMIERES IN 2021. Ten years after the Season 3 finale, In Treatment is returning for a new season, this time starring Emmy winner Uzo Aduba as the central therapist. She’ll help guide a trio of patients as she wrestles.