The leaders of the UK's largest parties gave their final televised performance last night, so we invited in 11 listeners to see what impact, if any, the big four had.
On BBC's Question Time, Labour's Ed Miliband, David Cameron of the Conservatives and Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg were grilled by an audience in Leeds, with the SNP's Nicola Sturgeon appearing on a separate BBC Scotland programme straight after in the same format, but with a different crowd.
The panel, of course, had different views on who performed best in the final test before voting opens on May 7th.
Mr Miliband ruled out any kind of deal with the Scottish National Party, saying he would rather not be Prime Minister than rely on support from the SNP.
SNP Depute Leader Stewart Hosie said Scots voters would never forgive the Labour leader if that were true.
"Labour already had huge problems in Scotland - Ed Miliband has just made them a whole lot worse." he added.
Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy said the party has 'called the SNP's bluff'.
He said "It's now up to the SNP to be clear - will they oppose Labour's radical plan to make life fairer for working class Scots and would they be prepared to prevent, or bring down, a Labour Government?" he added.
Our panel was split on what the best result, or worst result could be once the polls close and all the votes counted.
If you still haven't decided who you're voting for, or just want to know more about Fife's 20 candidates, we have a full breakdown here