It's Worth What?

A game show in which a team determines the prices of expensive antiques and luxury items, with a top prize of $1,000,000.

Rules
The team plays seven different rounds, each involving the prices of luxury items & antiques. A successful round places money in their bank:

Round 7: $30,000

Round 6: $20,000

Round 5: $20,000

Round 4: $10,000

Round 3: $10,000

Round 2: $5,000

Round 1: $5,000

Unlike most game shows, a wrong answer doesn't end the game.

Rounds
What's Worth More: Two items are presented, and the team has to determine which is more.

Truth Be Sold: An item is shown, and two stories about it are read. The team must pick the true story.

Are You Buying It?: Three items are presented, and the team has to determine which is the most valuable.

Property Line: Three pieces of real estate are shown, one of which is an exact value. The team must determine the exact value property, and the ones that go above & below it.

Out Of The Closet: Three pairs of clothing are presented. After selecting what they believe is the most expensive of each pair, the values are revealed. If the team selected the three most expensive items, they win.

Time Is Money: Three items from three centuries are shown, and the team has to determine which is the most valuable.

Celebrity Inflation: Three items sold at auction that were connected to celebrities are displayed, and the team must match the item to the celebrity.

Final Round (It's Worth More)
In the final round, the team can win up to ten times their current winnings. Eight items are displayed, and the team must select the four most expensive items. The team can arrange them in any order, but once an order is decided, it cannot be changed. The items are grouped into four pairings, and if the selected item is worth more than the other item in that group, the team stays alive. The next two pairings double the current earnings, and being correct on all four pairings earns the team ten times their winnings, up to $1,000,000. They can stop and keep the money, because a wrong guess leaves them with a quarter of their current earnings.