After all these years,
anyone who has been paying attention to Floor is Lava should know what's up. Each episode features a competition between three teams, with the grand prize of $10,000 going to the team that is the first to reach the summit of the volcano. Plus, a unique lava lamp, of course.
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There are new rooms to explore as well as the standard traps and physical puzzles. To a large extent, Season 3 is the same as Seasons 1 and 2. New contestants and a few different rooms have been added to the show, but otherwise it's the same as before. On the other hand, you may want to avoid this instalment if you were turned off by the show's previous yelling contestants, grating narrator, and thematically arranged family groups.
Season 2 review
It's funny, but in my Season 2 review I made a joke about how these names sound like WWE Tag Team names that were never used. This time, however, there are three competitors, lending an air of poetic irony to the proceedings.
The colourful water (lava) is back, and there are a few new obstacles and slightly altered rooms in this episode. Once again, you're allowed to put your legs in the water but you can't go under. Each team is given the standard little background confirming their history and why they've chosen the gimmicks they have, while crazy jumps or amusing segments are replayed multiple times.
In passing, it's amusing to notice that they've used the same projection screen background that Disney has been using for their Marvel movies with this. Whether or not this is a dig at Disney is up for debate. Thankfully, this episode doesn't feature any Z-list celebrities, and the contestants seem to be having a blast. The question is whether or not the listeners feel the same way.
season on Netflix
Despite its basic game-show premise, Floor Is Lava has already been renewed for a third season on Netflix. It will be interesting to see how many people stick around for the long haul with this one, though, because this is the kind of show that can become repetitive quickly, and there aren't any major differences between seasons 1 and 2 this time around. Even so, fans of previous seasons should feel right at home with the third instalment.
Floor is Lava, a Netflix reality show created by Megan McGrath and Irad Eyal, offers a fresh take on a time-honored pastime for kids. Show contestants, like those in the eponymous game, must find their way from one end of the arena to the other without touching the ground. If a player does fail a task, they will fall into the molten red lava at the room's base. Although the challenges are difficult, the winning team will receive $10,000 and the Floor will be a Lava Lamp.
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