The play money is handed out upon correct letter calls to keep score during each round, and paid back when vowels are bought. The categories are Event, Fictional Character, Landmark, Person, Phrase, Place, Thing, and Title (although none seem to hint at a compilation date all mentioned titles, events, and characters date to 1974 or earlier). The instruction booklet shows a similar picture with a different Wheel angle and several prizes to the right of and behind the puzzle board (including the second set of pricetags), plus the complete LADY MACBETH puzzle. The puzzle board on the First Edition reads L_DY M_CBETH, with the A's replaced by the green-glitter side of their respective trilons. The boxes show a host who somewhat resembles Chuck Woolery, but isn't ( Susan Stafford has stated that the Milton Bradley Company paid her $500 for the right to use her likeness) they also feature the color-coded contestant displays and the 'real' version of the in-game Wheel, complete with the original special spaces.
Issued two editions as part of their 'Key to Fun and Learning' line (strangely, both classified as #4532), each containing an instruction/puzzle book with 168 puzzles, Milton Bradley Bucks (play money in denominations of $5-$10-$20-$50-$100-$500), a 30-space puzzle board, a large supply of cardboard letters, and a spinner representing the Wheel.