Re: Legends Of The Hidden Temple Full Episodes In Hindi

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Jul 18, 2024, 10:55:23 AM7/18/24
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The set design of Legends of the Hidden Temple was based on the Indiana Jones movies,[17] and Marianne Arneberg of the Orlando Sentinel described the program as "a combination of Jeopardy and Raiders of the Lost Ark."[4] The set design has been described as Mayan.[18][19] It included areas for different types of physical challenges: a broad but shallow[20] pool of water (the moat), a set of steps (the Steps of Knowledge), and a large, two-and-a-half-floor[21] vertical labyrinth (the "hidden temple"). At the temple's gate was a talking Olmec head simply named Olmec (voiced by Dee Baker). Olmec narrated the stories told in the steps of knowledge and temple game challenges (although in the first season, Fogg narrated the temple game challenges). Each episode centered on a particular legend regarding an artifact (real or fictional) from around the world that found its way to the temple. Some artifacts included "Lawrence of Arabia's Headdress", "The Electrified Key of Benjamin Franklin", "The Jewel-Encrusted Egg of Catherine the Great", and "The Broken Wing of Icarus." Olmec also serves as the basis for the logo. In addition to providing an artifact, the legend also was important to other aspects of the show: the Steps of Knowledge used questions based on the historical legend, and the theme of the temple games was also loosely based on the legend.[22]

legends of the hidden temple full episodes in hindi


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The original Nickelodeon Legends of the Hidden Temple was my favorite show as a kid, so you can imagine how excited I was when I heard new episodes -- now involving adult contestants -- would be aired starting this month. I watched the first new reboot episode ( -of-the-hidden-temple/the-maya-legend-of-the-hero-twins/?play=c70d460a-a3ac-4048-b941-769eb511b91e) and enjoyed the nostalgia, but honestly I gotta say all the cutting back and forth between the real action and separately-filmed clips of the contestants talking (mostly distracting garbage, artificially commentating on their own performance) was terrible and took away from the focused thrill of the games. Like seriously, introducing the players at the start and letting them talk a bit about their backgrounds is fine (adds a personal touch, but not too much), but interspersing their edited-in talking scenes with the main live action of the games adds zero value and is so annoying! It's just a filler to extend the show to 1 hour instead of 30 min! I would love to see some edited episodes with all the filler talking cut out. It's literally the only thing stopping me from continuing to watch upcoming episodes.

In the final round, often known as the Temple Run, the winning team took whatever Pendants of Life they had (most commonly, a full pendant and half of the second) into the temple. The temple consisted of 12 to 13 rooms, depending on the layout, each connected by a doorway which may or may not have been open during the game, depending on the setup used that day. One room in the labyrinth had the themed artifact; three rooms held Temple Guards (spotters in lavish Mayan sentinel costumes). If the winning team had an incomplete pendant, the remaining half-pendant would be in a room as well. However, if the team had only one pendant going into the temple, there would be no hidden pendant. In that case, if the second player ran into a Guard, the game would end.

When a player encountered one Guard, the player was forced to give up a full pendant in order to continue or if caught without a pendant be taken out of the temple. The second player now had the chance to enter, with all opened doors remaining open and all known Temple Guards nonexistent. If the second player possessed only half a Pendant of Life, a Temple Guard could catch him or her and end the game. To prevent that, the second player would also have to find the other half of the pendant which was hidden in the temple. It was often well-hidden and only a few contestants have found one during their run.

This final round has the remaining team run through Olmec's temple in search of their episode's featured artifact. Before the team is sent in the temple, Olmec would give a description of each room and whoever decides to enter first would always bring in a full Pendant of Life. The temple is full of locked doors and dead ends, along with mysterious Mayan temple guards who are assigned to protect three specific rooms. If a temple guard emerges, a Pendant of Life can be given to him so the first player can keep going. However, if the player is caught without a pendant, they will be taken out of the temple so their teammate can enter. When a team takes 1 Pendants of Life to the temple, the other half of the second player's pendant would be hidden somewhere in the temple. Once the player finds the other half of their pendant, they will get an extra life, as a full pendant of life is needed to keep going after a temple guard emerges. If either player can grab their episode's featured artifact, all of the doors would unlock and the temple guards will vanish and they need to make their way out of the temple before time runs out. This round has a three-minute time limit and a team can win up to three prizes, with the first for entering the temple, the second for grabbing the artifact and a grand prize (either a vacation or a week at US Space Camp) for bringing the artifact out of the temple in time.

When asked by TMZ if he would compete in the reboot, Kirk said that he was only slated to co-host. However, he said "would do it," revealing that he used to set three minutes on the clock and complete the temple run himself before he hosted Legends of the Hidden Temple episodes. Kirk also appeared as himself in the 2016 Nickelodeon original film Legends of the Hidden Temple, where he played the tour guide at the Hidden Temple theme park.

"Thank you/Thanks, Olmec. All right, you guys won (insert number of pendants here) in the temple games. Who's going first? (Contestant: I AM!). Okay, now, which way you're gonna go, up or down? (Contestant: UP./DOWN.) Okay, now, when I say 'Go', you're gonna race through the temple gates into the Temple and make your way towards the (insert specific room) and grab the (insert artifact of the day). But be careful, because the Temple has many locked doors and dead ends, and also hidden inside the Temple are Temple Guards, assigned to protect three specific rooms. If you enter one of those rooms, a Temple Guard will run/jump out and capture you, but you can trade your pendant in for an extra life and go on, but, if you're caught without a pendant, you'll be taken out of the temple and it will be (insert name)'s turn to enter and try his/her luck. (Now, you have a pendant in a half. Hidden somewhere inside the temple is the other half of your pendant. If you find the half pendant and you're carrying the other half, you'll also get an extra life.) As soon as you can reach the (insert artifact of the day), all of the doors of the temple will instantly unlock and the temple guards will vanish/disappear. And you'll have three minutes, and for your efforts, you will both be handsomely rewarded. And here's how." - Forrester (in Series 1)

The Temple Games were about the same as any of the other episodes: Physical obstacles that related to the artifact of the episode. Nothing out of the ordinary happened to the actual games, but there was something eerie in the air. Random sounds started to come from the temple such as birds chirping and frogs croaking. One of the children thought they had saw something move around in the temple, but they could only make out a shadow of a person. The temple had already been set up for the temple run, so all of the remaining staff were out front helping and there should have been no one inside the temple. The host sent in a few staff members to take a look to make sure that it wasn't some staff member or one of the children who got lost running around, but all they could find were that all the doors were open when they had originally been shut.

The Yellow Frogs had won the second and third temple games, making them the winners. They were only awarded two half pieces of the Pendant of Life, unlike later episodes that would give a full one for winning the third game. This would mean that the second runner would have no Pendant of Life going into the temple and if they were caught it would be game over instantly without a way to protect themselves.

The time has never been better for Legends of the Hidden Temple to possibly make a comeback. A Nickelodeon original movie based on the original game show will soon hit the airwaves, and Kirk Fogg will appear as the tour guide of a reenactment park built on top of an ancient temple. Good old Olmec will be on hand to help kids make it through the dangers afoot. Throw in the fact that television nowadays is filled with all manner of reboots, remakes, and revivals, and new episodes of Legends of the Hidden Temple could definitely happen.

It also seems that my legend was made into a movie for the small screen 21 years after the closure of my original tales and challenges. This one expands on my backstory of my people and I and the brave escapades of three youths who venture into my temple and brave its dangers to restore my kingdom and save it from one of my treacherous sons. It premiered on the day of Thanksgiving in the sixth year of the 2010s. A year later, Kirk Fogg and I appeared in animated form in a special crossover episode of The Loud House. 8 years after that crossover, it was announced that adults who had grown up hearing the legends would get a chance to attempt to make their way through the temple in a reboot exclusive to Quibi. After the service shut down in December 2020, The CW took on reins for the reboot. It premiered in October 2021 with Cristela Alonzo hosting. Sadly, the Temple Gates were closed on the reboot after just one season of 13 episodes.The format of Legends is as follows:

  • The Moat: Six two-person teams enter the Temple, but must complete a race across a narrow pool of water. The first four to cross and ring their team's gong advance to the next round. Very often, even touching the water once would cause a team to have to start again from scratch. The 2021 reboot cuts this down to four teams, who must now complete a multi-task objective in an actual lake, with the first three teams to complete the tasks advancing.
  • The Legend: Olmec tells the contestants (and the audience) about the legend in question. Invariably, the legend mentions an artifact belonging to a major historical figure which somehow "made its way into the Temple" after the owner's passing. At the end of the legend in the original run, Kirk asks where the artifact can be found, and Olmec tells the contestants which room of the temple it can be found in (this is saved for the temple preview segment in the revival).
  • The Steps of Knowledge: A trivia round, with teams being given questions about Olmec's legend, as well as basic trivia about the places mentioned in the legend. Each correct answer lets the contestants take one step down the Steps of Knowledge; three correct answers are enough to win one of the two spots in the next round.
  • The Temple Games: A series of three competitive physical contests, usually themed around the legend, which will net the team who wins a "Pendant of Life". The first two games are worth a half-pendant each and involve one player from each team, while the last game is worth a full pendant of life and involves both players from each team (and usually determines which team wins). If the teams tie in a game, they both receive that game's pendant. If there is a tie, Olmec will ask a general trivia tiebreaking question (in the first season, getting the question wrong meant losing the quest immediately). The 2021 reboot cuts this down to two Temple Games (one a head-to-head challenge, the other a time trial challenge) that both players participate in, each being worth a full pendant of life with the Sudden Death round also being worth one full pendant.
  • Olmec's Temple (The Temple Run): After the announcer describes the Promotional Considerations and Olmec describes the rooms, the teams get three minutes (or 4 minutes in the 2021 reboot) to try to make it into the temple, grab the artifact, and make it out. The original temple is a two-story twelve-room maze, while the revival features a two-story layout of eight larger rooms; all doors are locked initially, and most rooms have a logic puzzle that must be solved before any doors which can be unlocked will unlock. Grabbing the artifact instantly unlocks all doors and banishes any remaining Temple Guards (and nets the team a second prize); making it out of the temple before time runs out nets you the grand prize (in early seasons, a trip to Space Camp). The 2021 reboot awards $2,500 for the first consolation prize, $10,000 for getting to the artifact, and $25,000 for escaping the temple with the artifact.
  • Temple Guards: Three rooms in the Temple also have Temple Guards; you don't know where they are until the run begins. If you have a whole Pendant of Life, you can bribe the temple guard with it; if not, you are dragged out of the temple, and your partner gets to try to finish with whatever time remains. If the team that goes to the Temple has only one or one-and-a-half Pendant(s), they only have protection against two of the guards, and running into the third will usually end the game. To help them out, the teams with only one Pendant have more choices of paths to avoid the third guard, while the teams with one-and-a-half Pendants can find an extra half so that their second player can bribe the last guard with a full Pendant. The 2021 reboot Temple Games round is set up to always give teams two full pendants, meaning it's impossible for a Temple Guard to end the run.

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