THE Chase fans slammed the show as a "fix" after a contestant was given a series of "ridiculous questions" as they went head-to-head with the Chaser.
ITV presenter Bradley Walsh, 61, was joined by four more contestants in a bid to beat the Chaser and take home the prize money.
The host was joined by Scottish player Steve, 53, who wanted to treat his wife to some fancy bling.
The keen golfer impressed viewers as he managed to get £8,000 in the cash builder round.
The railway design manager then went head-to-head with Jenny 'The Vixen' Ryan in the next round.
However, fans were baffled by the "horrifying" set of questions and fumed that it was unfair that the best player was "robbed" of a chance of getting back to the final chase.
One wrote: "Hardest set of questions ever for Steve...proper fix! #TheChase"
"Always give hardest to the best players just to get rid so Chaser's look more intelligent against the ones that are not so good boring now this #thechase," another vented.
A third annoyed fan posted: "Steve's questions were horrifying there. #thechase"
A fourth added: "#TheChase Steve was robbed, those questions were ridiculous."
One of the questions asked the player: "Someone with a nightshade intolerance should avoid eating what?"
The options were - sweetcorn, potatoes, carrots - with Steve selecting sweetcorn but the correct answer was potatoes.
He was also asked: "What is another term for the Kings James Bible translation?"
Luckily, Steve managed to guess correctly picking "Authorised Version" out of the three choices.
The stumped contestant remarked: "This is just not falling for me."
Most read in News TV
He was also asked: "In 1974, who proposed that black holes emit subatomic particles until they exhaust their energy and finally explode?"
The choices were between: Fred Hoyle, Stephen Hawking and Peter Higg – with him correctly guessing Stephen Hawking.
Another question also confused the player, Bradley asked: "We’ll burn that bridge when we get to it is an example of a blended idiom informally known as what?"
The choices on offer were between: Eggcorn, Malaphor, Spoonerism – Steve put spoonerism but got it wrong with the correct answer being Malaphor.
Unfortunately, Steve stumbled at the last hurdle when he had no clue who billionaire Elon Musk had married and answered popstar Fergie instead of artist Grimes.
He sadly lost out on the final chase after Jenny managed to catch up to him in a tense round.
Steve was joined by Dino, 47, a science teacher from Romford, Anna, 20, a geography student from Peterborough and Pam, 36, an admin assistant from Newcastle.
The remaining contestants managed to make it back with a total prize pot of £18,000.
With 18 spaces to catch the players, Jenny had her work cut out.
READ MORE SUN STORIES
But despite executing one push back out of a possible two, the team were caught out by quizmaster Jenny with 14 seconds to spare.
The Chase is on weekdays on ITV at 5pm.