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  2. Logo Board Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logo_Board_Game

    The LOGO Board Game is for 2 to 6 players (or teams) aged 12 and up. Players travel round the board of purple, yellow, green, and red spaces, based on correctly answered questions, until they reach the winning zone in the center. The questions are based on logos, products and packaging of well-known brands. There are three types of question card:

  3. Sporcle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sporcle

    Quizzes can come in nine game types: Classic, Clickable, Grid, Map, Multiple Choice, Order Up, Picture Box, Picture Click, and Slideshow, each of which can be played in a variety of ways, including Minefield, Forced Order, or entering the answers in any order. The type and method by which users will complete the quiz is chosen by the quiz creators.

  4. Pub quiz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pub_quiz

    The person asking the questions is known as the quizmaster or quiz host. Quiz hosts often also mark and score answers submitted by teams, although sometimes teams will mark each other's answer sheets. The questions can be set by the bar staff or landlord, by a third-party who may also supply the host, or by volunteers from amongst the contestants.

  5. Trivial Pursuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trivial_Pursuit

    Trivial Pursuit is a board game in which winning is determined by a player's ability to answer trivia and popular culture questions. Players move their pieces around a board, the squares they land on determining the subject of a question they are asked from a card (from six categories including "history" and "science and nature").

  6. Jeopardy! - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeopardy!

    The show is a quiz competition that reverses the traditional question-and-answer format of many quiz shows. Rather than being given questions, contestants are instead given general knowledge clues in the form of answers and they must identify the person, place, thing, or idea that the clue describes, phrasing each response in the form of a ...

  7. Twenty questions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty_questions

    In developing the participatory anthropic principle (PAP), which is an interpretation of quantum mechanics, theoretical physicist John Archibald Wheeler used a variant on twenty questions, called surprise twenty questions, [3] to show how the questions we choose to ask about the universe may dictate the answers we get. In this variant, the ...

  8. Words are overrated. Here’s why we’re addicted to ‘silent ...

    www.aol.com/words-overrated-why-addicted-silent...

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  9. Quiz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quiz

    A printed quiz on health issues. A quiz is a form of mind sport in which players attempt to answer questions correctly on one or several topics. Quizzes can be used as a brief assessment in education and similar fields to measure growth in knowledge, abilities, and skills, or simply as a hobby.