Conner Kemmsies walked into the bonus round with momentum, money, and his family beaming from the audience. He’d already secured more than $19,000 and a dream cruise, proving he could dominate the wheel and the board. But when the final puzzle appeared, the mood shifted. “Phrase” usually signals something familiar, almost automatic. Instead, Conner stared down a sentence that felt oddly plain, even after he pieced together the first half. When time ran out and “I DID MY HOMEWORK” flashed in full, his good‑natured joke about not being in school anymore only underlined how offbeat the solution felt.
Online, that unease turned into outrage. Viewers argued that the show’s categories have become slippery, the puzzles less intuitive, and the bonus wheel suspiciously repetitive with its $40,000 minimum. Some still defended the challenge, insisting the puzzle was solvable and the prize distribution random. But for many longtime fans, this episode tapped into a deeper fear: that the show they grew up trusting might be slowly drifting away from the game they thought they knew.