In the 2022 version of the game, roughly a third of the answers are "proper names" (Godzilla, Tiktok, etc). In the classic version such words were inadmissible both as clues and answers.
First version of Password since the 1971-75 ABC revival not to have any additional words, either before (i.e. Super, Million Dollar) or after (i.e. All-Stars, Plus) its name. The ABC revival did add "All-Stars" to the title in 1974 with celebrities only before reverting to its original name when the all-celebrity format was dropped.
From the time Million Dollar Password (2008) ended in 2009 until this game show premiered 13 years later, it represents the 2nd longest amount of time Password in any form was not on television since the show first premiered in 1961. The longest amount of time is 19 years between the end of Super Password (1984) in 1989 until the premiere of Million Dollar Password (2008).
Including Bill Cullen, who substitute-hosted for Allen Ludden on Password Plus (1979) in 1980, all of the Password hosts were celebrity players at some point on any of the versions of Password. Ludden was a celebrity player a couple of times on the ABC revival of Password (1971), while Cullen, Tom Kennedy, Bert Convy and Regis Philbin were celebrity players on Password Plus. Additionally, Cullen and Kennedy were celebrity players on Super Password (1984). Keke Palmer was a celebrity player on this version of Password when she partnered with Yvette Nicole Brown, while Jimmy Fallon handled hosting duties. Jack Narz, Kennedy's brother and a game show host legend himself, switched places with Tom when he was a celebrity player on Password Plus in 1982.
As of January 2024, Keke Palmer became the first person to win the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Host for a Game Show since all Game Show categories were moved from the Daytime Emmy Awards to the Primetime Emmy Awards. She is the third host of Password to win the award, which was previously the Outstanding Game Show Host Daytime Emmy Award, joining Allen Ludden, who won the award in 1975 for the ABC version of the show, and Regis Philbin, though he won his for the ABC version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (1999) in 2001. Palmer is also the third woman to win an Emmy for Outstanding Game Show Host, joining Ludden's wife, Betty White, for Just Men! (1983) in 1983, and Meredith Viera for the syndicated version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (2002) in 2009, as well as the third African American to win the award, joining Steve Harvey, who won three for Family Feud (1999), including the last Outstanding Game Show Host Daytime Emmy Award in 2022, and Wayne Brady for Let's Make a Deal (2009) in 2018.