This study investigates long-term features and utterance contours of fundamental frequency (f0) derived from the German Alcohol Language Corpus. The corpus comprises read, spontaneous, and command&control speech uttered by 148 speakers of both genders and various age groups when sober and intoxicated. f0 median, f0 range, and f0 contours are analyzed for intoxication and interactions with gender and age. Contours are compared both directly (root mean squared error, statistical correlation, or the Euclidean distance in the spectral space of the contour) and by parameterization of the contour using discrete cosine transform and the first and second moment of the lower contour spectrum. Results partly confirm earlier findings, i.e., f0 average and range are mostly raised with intoxication, and also suggest that the majority of speakers do not follow a general trend, but show idiosyncratic alterations to f0. f0 contours differ significantly with intoxication, but a more detailed analysis could not assign these changes to specific general form changes like decline or curvature. The results suggest that it is not possible to predict intoxication from f0 in a single model across different speakers. Instead a speaker-dependent model to account for the individual speaker behavior is proposed.