• Introduction to JS Party and Front End Feud game show • Overview of the game rules and objectives • Meet the contestants: Una Kravitz and Adam Argyle from CSS Podcast, and James Q. Quick and Brad Garropy from Compressed FM • The host's introduction of witty questions for the contestants, which were written by an intern • The intern's awkward questions and the reactions of the contestants • Explanation of the game format, including face-offs, serial play, and stealing points • Software library or framework creators were identified by Jazz Party listeners • The top four responses were listed on a board, requiring at least five votes to be included • Dan Abramov and Guillermo Rauch were two of the top contenders • Rich Harris was ranked second with 17 responses • James made several incorrect guesses, including Mishko Hevery and Adam Watham • Evan Yu was incorrectly identified as the creator of View • The correct answer for jQuery was John Rezig • Discussing a game board with one spot left to fill • Naming frameworks and libraries, including jQuery, Svelte, Vue, React, and others • Cindrasaurus is mentioned as a guess for the final spot • Discussion of stealing the board and matching the fourth spot • Considering big-name library authors such as Tanner Linsley, Ryan Florence, and Remix/Astro • Final answer is Ryan Florence, but it's incorrect • Revealing the correct answer is Eleventy, author of a static site generator • Announcement of Zach Leventy being in the top four • Discussion of runners-up, including Tanner Lindsley, Ryan Carniato, Jordan Walk, and others • Shoutouts to various developers who received votes • Introduction of Vercel's front-end cloud concept • Explanation of framework-defined infrastructure • Discussion of how Vercel's platform transforms code for managed infrastructure • Breakdown of the "front-end cloud" concept • Vercel's front-end cloud is discussed • JS Party listeners name their top CSS properties • Top six responses are revealed (display, color, margin, font size, background, padding) • Adam and Yuna compete to match the most popular CSS properties in a game-like scenario • Discussion of a game being played involving coding websites • CSS Podcast is one of the teams playing and has already made some points • The audience was asked to vote for their favorite coding website, with Free Code Camp as an option • James and Yuna take turns guessing coding websites from a list on the board • Other guests participate in guessing, including Adam who tries to "pivot" his guess after seeing others' choices • The show discusses whether certain options (like ChatGPT) are truly websites • The name of a website was confirmed to be correct. • A game or competition was mentioned with opportunities to score points and steal. • Stack Overflow was discussed as a potential top choice among websites. • CSS Tricks and MDN were also mentioned in the context of popular websites. • Team Compressed won a round and earned 60 points to steal. • The favorite website of JSParty listeners was revealed to be developer.mozilla.org (MDN). • Honorable mentions included CSS Tricks before its acquisition and after it went dormant. • A new round, the "inverted round," was introduced with different scoring rules. • The objective of the inverted round was explained as trying to match the bottom side of the board. • Contestants are guessing HTML elements on a scoreboard • Each correct answer earns points, with some elements scoring more than others • The goal is to match the most popular but not too obscure elements • A "button" element is discussed and deemed too obscure • "Div" becomes a top contender after several guesses, eventually landing at #1 • Other elements mentioned include "main", "HTML", "anchor tag", and "body" • Contestants struggle to find the right balance between popularity and obscurity • Discussion of a game where players are guessing elements on an HTML page in order of appearance • Team members trying to score points by identifying elements such as script, nav, head, and body tags • A discussion about accessibility and H1 header tags • Awarding of 10 points for correctly identifying the H1 tag • Results from previous rounds, including a lead change between CSS Pod and Compressed FM • A discussion on a question asked to JS Party listeners: "In a word, software development makes me blank." • Answer choices include money, happiness, and tired, with Brad's answer being happiness at number one, worth 50 points • The game is a board game called Front-end Feud • The topic of discussion is software development and its effects on people • The game's "board" shows the top answers to questions about software development • A player, Brad, guesses that software development makes him burned out and tired • Another player suggests the answer is creative, which leads to a number being assigned to it • The player who chose creative has 207 points in this round alone • The game's leader is compressed with 347 points • The opposing team, CSS podcast, gets one last chance to catch up • A commercial break for Vana.ai, a Python RAG framework for accurate text-to-SQL generation • The game resumes with a new round where the teams have double points and play inverted style • TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) is discussed as a possible choice for the first slot • FTP (File Transfer Protocol) is mentioned and shown on the board • REST (Representational State of Resource) is briefly discussed, but ultimately not selected • TLS (Transport Layer Security) is chosen by Adam due to its probable inaccuracy • UDP (Universal Datagram Protocol) is guessed by James as a bold choice • IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol) is mentioned and shown on the board • IP (Internet Protocol) is selected by James as the final slot filler • Discussion about potato preference • LARPing (Live Action Role Playing) and protocol references • SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) vs HTTPS • Tip-giving controversy between contestants • Compressed FM team's victory in the game • Exit interview with new champions, Brad and James • Review of the game, including Adam and Yuna's performance • Discussion of inverted rounds and strategy • Discussing a game or competition • Future collaborations and ideas for the podcast • A survey or questionnaire to gather information from listeners • Feedback and appreciation for listener participation • Discussion of specific questions or challenges, including HTML and CSS puzzles • Review of past games and outcomes, with particular focus on the difficulty level • Review of the Front End Feud game show • Encouragement to play previous episodes and games on the JS Party website • Announcement of upcoming match between Compressed FM and Syntax Podcast • Promotion of other JS Party podcasts and dev game shows • Discussion of future episode with Shonde Person as a guest