Big Brother
Big Brother is a U.S.-focused reality competition where a group of strangers, known as HouseGuests, live together in a secluded house cut off from the outside world. Cameras and microphones capture every conversation, alliance, and conflict around the clock. Each week, players compete for power, nominate one another, and face an eviction decided by the group. Social strategy matters as much as challenges, and only one HouseGuest earns the final prize.
Big Brother places a cast of HouseGuests inside a specially built house where they have no contact with the outside world and are monitored continuously. The game blends social maneuvering with competitions: players fight for weekly power, use it to influence nominations, and campaign to survive eviction. House dynamics shift fast as friendships form, rivalries flare, and alliances rise and fall under constant pressure. With every move observed, HouseGuests must balance honesty and deception, manage public perception, and anticipate how others will vote. Personal stressors like isolation, lack of privacy, and shared living space intensify every decision, turning small disagreements into major turning points. Over the season, the field steadily shrinks through repeated evictions until a final group remains. Ultimately, the winner is determined at the end by those who were eliminated, rewarding the player who best combines competition performance, strategic control, and social relationships.