It started with hesitationā¦
And ended in history.
In a moment that had viewers on the edge of their seats, retired IT consultant Roman Dubowski has become just the seventh person EVER to win the top prize on Who Wants To Be A Millionaire ā and the way he did it? Nothing short of extraordinary.

From shaky beginnings to a flawless finish, this was the kind of television moment people will be talking about for years.
At first, it didnāt look like a winning run. Roman stumbled early, needing help from the audience on just the Ā£1,000 question ā a moment that could have shaken anyoneās confidence. But instead of crumbling, he steadied himself. Slowly. Calmly. Methodically. With each answer, his confidence grew, and so did the tension in the studio. Even host Jeremy Clarkson couldnāt hide his excitement, watching a contestant who seemed to transform right before everyoneās eyes.
By the time Roman reached the higher stakes, something had clearly shifted. The nerves were gone. In their place? Focus. Precision. A quiet determination that made every answer feel deliberate. When he confidently answered the Ā£500,000 question ā identifying X-rays as the first Nobel Prize-winning discovery in physics ā the room held its breath. It was the moment people started to believe this could really happen.

And then came the final question.
The £1 million moment.
What made it even more unbelievable? Roman still had two lifelines left ā a rare and powerful advantage at this stage of the game. Most contestants reach the final question with nothing left to fall back on. But Roman? He had options.
Yet what he did next shocked everyone.

Faced with the final question about a historic trademarked logo referenced in literature and art, Roman paused. He admitted he had āsomething in his headā ā a faint memory guiding him. He used his 50/50 lifeline, narrowing it down to two options: Bass Ale⦠or Coca-Cola.
The audience waited.
The tension was unbearable.
He still had one lifeline left ā Ask The Host.
But he didnāt use it.
Instead, Roman trusted himself.
Drawing on a memory of a painting by Manet, he made his choice.
Bass Ale.
Final answer.
For a split second, time seemed to stop.
Then ā the answer was confirmed.
Correct.

Confetti fell. The audience erupted. And just like that, Roman Dubowski became a millionaire.
But what made the moment even more remarkable wasnāt just the win ā it was his reaction. No dramatic celebration. No shouting. Just quiet disbelief.
āIt hasnāt sunk in,ā he admitted.
After 34 years working as an IT analyst, Roman had only hoped to win Ā£32,000⦠maybe Ā£64,000 if things went well. A million pounds? That wasnāt even part of the plan.
And yet, here he was.
A life-changing moment.
But perhaps the most touching detail of all?
The first person he wanted to call wasnāt a friend, or a colleague ā it was his sister. The same sister who helped him earlier in the game when he needed it most.
Because behind every big win⦠thereās often someone who helped you get there.
Roman says the money will go towards simple things: moving house after more than 30 years, travelling, enjoying retirement without financial stress. Nothing flashy. Nothing extravagant.

Just freedom.
And maybe thatās what makes this story resonate so deeply.
Itās not about luck.
Itās not about showmanship.
Itās about perseverance.
Because Roman didnāt just walk onto that stage and win.
He applied for the show three times over two decades.
He waited.
He tried again.
And when his moment finally cameā¦
He was ready.
Because sometimesā¦
The biggest victories donāt come from knowing everythingā¦
They come from believing in yourself when it matters most š°āØ


