As far as other game shows go, Wheel of Fortune's always good for a bit of fun, and so is the Price is Right. The good thing with the Price is Right in Australia, is that it all builds up to the Master Showcase at the end of the show, where contestants can and have one on a few occasions won $500, 000 worth of stuff - usually an Alfa Spider, Motorcycle, and a luxury apartment block on the Gold Coast. And the host, Larry Enda, is almost a human incarnation of Guy Smiley. Young fella, pearly white small, tall, and a real hit with the female contestants.
I like Millionaire in Australia (it's too easy in America, especially with four lifelines), but when I was in America, I came to love Jeopardy once again. It is a very challenging show, and I find that the champs of the show are usually above average in intelligence. Problem is, it got axed in Australia when I was about 10 years old, and it shows no signs of going back - I guess people thought that asking questions backwards was kinda retarded. I always had trouble answering those U.S. Civil War questions all the time, so an Australian incarnation would be awesome.
There's one other gameshow that we have that I really enjoy, and I am not sure whether or not it is peculiar to Australia. It was called Sale of the Century for a long time - and basically, it's just an old-fashioned hit-the-buzzer-and-answer-the-question affair. It went off the air for a few years and then came back as Temptation - not a very suitable name for what it is, but the 'temptation' element comes from the prizes offered mid-game, whereby the leading contestant can spend some of their points on it (e.g. 15 points for a diamond ring, 10 points for a top-of-the-range computer, etc.). The best part of the show is the fast-money round at the end - if the champ decides they're coming back, they try to build up their prize money - and if they answer 10 questions in a row correctly in the allotted time without a mistake (one mistake and they have to start from $0 again), they add $10, 000 to their total prize money (i.e. $1000 per correct answer, which is what they get to take home if they lose the next week).