

For one thing, the names on the podium were removed and now only the show's logo was on the head of family's spot. The set used in the pilot was modified when Family Feud became a series in 1976. There was also a second boxy shaped podium with a microphone on it, used for Fast Money. The buzz-in boxes were in the same color. In front of the board was the face-off podium also shaped in a box-like manner, which housed the show's logo and had two triangle lights (green & blue) on the top square corners. Above it were three electronic numerical displays, the bank with arrows on either side pointing to the families' scoreboards. Under the board were three little boxes which were used to display the strikes. At the end of the pilot the digital board had an animated light pattern, which was to light up/turn off one row at a time. In the pilot, the board was displayed in black on yellow.

The third side was a digital board which displayed the show's title and was used for Fast Money. They were similar to that of Match Game the show that gave us Family Feud, and the unplayed panels were tan with a pale blue circle in them. The number sides of the flip panels had the numbers sandwiched between 2 triangles. Two sides of the board had twelve flip panels (six in each column) used for revealing answers during the main game (though no question ever had 11 or 12 answers, the most was 10), one of those sides was covered up by the show's logo during the opening and was taken down backstage when the opening was finished. The centerpiece of the set was another box-like shape containing a trilon game board.

In the pilot, they displayed the names of the contestants playing. The podiums were funky and had boxes sticking out of three positions, with the head of family's position being longer than the others. When announcer Johnny Olsen said "ready for action" or "on your marks", they were both signals to release each family from their pose, and then after he said the show's title, the families went down the steps and stood at their respective podiums. At the beginning of the show, the families stood & sat inside their respective rooms and posed like they were a family portrait. Each contained oval-shaped door ways with light around them, a yellow door with the family's last name on it in red letters and a secret room inside each. It also had two box-like shaped backdrops behind the competing families. The set used in the 1975 pilot had an orange background.
