50 Bible Trivia Questions for Kids That Sunday School Didn’t Quite Cover
These aren't the questions kids expect. They're the ones that make a room full of eight-year-olds gasp, argue, and remember Bible stories they thought they already knew.
I once watched a twelve-year-old slam both hands on a cafeteria table and shout “MERCURY” with the confidence of someone betting their life savings. The answer was Venus. But here’s the thing , that moment, the full-body commitment to a wrong answer, is the exact reason trivia works with middle schoolers better than almost any other age group. They haven’t learned to hedge yet. They go all in. And when you’ve got the right questions, that energy turns a random Tuesday into something they’ll talk about for weeks.
I’ve been running trivia for years, and middle school crowds are a different animal. They know more than adults expect and less than they think they do. They’ve absorbed an enormous amount of information from YouTube, TikTok, random Wikipedia spirals at midnight, and whatever their science teacher got passionate about last Thursday. The trick isn’t dumbing things down. It’s finding the questions that sit right in that gap between what they’re sure they know and what’s actually true.
These 125 trivia questions for middle school are built for that gap. Some will feel like layups. Some will start arguments. A few will make the quiet kid in the back suddenly become the loudest person in the room. That’s the whole point.
1. What planet is closest in size to Earth?
This is the one I open with because it sorts the room immediately. The kids who shout “Mars” are thinking about all those Mars rover projects they did in fifth grade. But size-wise, it’s not even close.
2. How many continents are there?
Sounds like a gimme. It is a gimme. But I’ve learned you need one of these early so everyone feels like they’re in the game.
3. What is the largest ocean on Earth?
Another one most kids nail, but every once in a while someone says Atlantic with total conviction and you can see the exact moment they realize they mixed them up.
4. In what year did the Titanic sink?
Middle schoolers know the Titanic. They know it from the movie, from memes, from that one classmate who went through a Titanic phase in fourth grade. The year, though, trips up more of them than you’d expect.
5. What gas do plants absorb from the atmosphere during photosynthesis?
This one’s a confidence builder for the science kids. Let them have it.
6. What is the smallest country in the world by area?
I love this question because half the room has heard this fact before and feels smart, and the other half genuinely can’t believe a country can be that small.
7. What does “www” stand for in a website address?
A generation that’s been online since birth, and a surprising number of them have never thought about what those three letters actually mean.
8. How many bones does an adult human body have?
This one always gets a range of guesses, from 150 to 500. The real number sits right in the middle of where most people land.
9. What is the hardest natural substance on Earth?
Quick, clean, satisfying. The kind of question that makes someone feel smart when they get it right.
10. What country gifted the Statue of Liberty to the United States?
Most middle schoolers have heard this, but there’s always a table that second-guesses themselves into England. The doubt is the fun part.
11. What is the chemical symbol for gold?
This is where the periodic table kids get to shine. Most of the room guesses “Go” or “Gd” because why wouldn’t it start with the same letters as the word?
12. What is the longest river in the world?
This one starts arguments even among adults. For years the answer was the Nile, then people started making the case for the Amazon. For most textbooks middle schoolers are reading, though, there’s a standard answer.
13. What are the three states of matter most commonly taught in school?
The plasma kids will want credit. And honestly, fair. But this question is specifically about the three they learn first.
14. Who wrote the play “Romeo and Juliet”?
If a middle schooler doesn’t know this one, their English teacher is going to take it personally.
15. What is the value of pi rounded to two decimal places?
Every math class has that one kid who’s memorized it to fifty digits. This question is for the other thirty kids.
16. What type of animal is a dolphin , fish or mammal?
They all know this. They’ve known it since second grade. But watch what happens when you ask it in a trivia setting: someone always hesitates. The pressure does something.
17. What is the largest organ in the human body?
“The liver!” “The brain!” “The lungs!” I’ve heard them all. The answer is the one they’re literally wearing.
18. What is the formula for finding the area of a triangle?
Math in trivia form hits different. Suddenly the formula they’ve written a hundred times on worksheets vanishes from their brains.
19. What document begins with “We the People”?
Some kids say the Declaration of Independence. It’s the most common wrong answer I get for this question, and it makes sense , both documents are foundational, both are old, and they blur together in memory.
20. What force keeps us on the ground and keeps the Moon orbiting Earth?
A lot of kids know the word but haven’t connected it to both of those things at once. The question does the teaching.
21. How many chambers does the human heart have?
The number three floats around more than it should. Maybe because “three” just sounds right for body stuff.
22. What is the main language spoken in Brazil?
This is one of my favorite questions for this age group. Nearly every hand shoots up with “Spanish,” and the reveal is genuinely surprising to a lot of them.
23. What is the boiling point of water in degrees Fahrenheit?
Simple, but it separates the kids who memorized it from the kids who are guessing. And there are always guessers.
24. What are the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution called?
Social studies teachers everywhere are silently rooting for their students right now.
25. What is the powerhouse of the cell?
I’m legally required to include this. It’s the most memed biology fact in existence. And you know what? In a room full of middle schoolers, it still gets a cheer.
26. What is the only continent with no permanent human population?
Researchers live there, but nobody calls it home. That distinction matters and it’s worth explaining when you reveal the answer.
27. What color do you get when you mix all colors of light together?
This is one of those questions where the wrong answer feels so right that getting it wrong actually teaches you something. Paint and light don’t play by the same rules.
28. Who was the first president of the United States?
Yes, it’s easy. But I include questions like this because in trivia, pacing matters. You need moments where everyone breathes before the next gut-punch.
29. What is the most abundant gas in Earth’s atmosphere?
“Oxygen!” shouts every confident kid in the room. And they’re wrong. This is one of those facts that corrects a misconception most people carry well into adulthood.
30. What instrument has 88 keys?
Quick and clean. The music kids pounce on this one.
31. What is the term for a word that means the same as another word?
English class disguised as trivia. Works every time.
32. In what ocean would you find the Great Barrier Reef?
About half the room gets this. The other half knows it’s near Australia but can’t name which ocean Australia sits in, which is a different kind of problem entirely.
33. How many sides does a hexagon have?
Geometry vocab. The prefix does the work if they know their Greek roots.
34. What is the fastest land animal?
This one’s almost universal knowledge at this age, but I keep it because the follow-up fact makes it worth it.
35. What is the name of the imaginary line that divides the Earth into the Northern and Southern Hemispheres?
Straightforward geography, but the word “imaginary” in the question makes some kids overthink it.
36. What is the square root of 144?
Math trivia is a genre unto itself. Some kids can do this instantly. Others stare at the ceiling and start multiplying in their heads.
37. What famous scientist developed the theory of relativity?
His face is on dorm room posters everywhere. His name is practically a synonym for genius.
38. What is the largest planet in our solar system?
Jupiter doesn’t just win this category. It embarrasses the competition. You could fit every other planet inside it and still have room.
39. What war was fought between the North and South regions of the United States?
I include this not because it’s hard but because the follow-up question in their heads is always “when was that?” And that’s worth exploring.
40. What is the name for a triangle with all three sides of equal length?
Equilateral, isosceles, scalene. The vocabulary test nobody asked for but everyone gets pulled into.
41. What is the name of the fictional country where “Black Panther” takes place?
Middle schoolers who’ve seen the movie will shout this instantly. The ones who haven’t will guess something that sounds vaguely African, which is its own kind of learning moment.
42. In the Harry Potter series, what are non-magical people called?
This splits the room between the Harry Potter kids and everyone else. The Harry Potter kids will also correct your pronunciation.
43. What video game features characters named Mario and Luigi?
Even kids who’ve never picked up a controller know this. It’s cultural furniture at this point.
44. What is the name of the talking snowman in Disney’s “Frozen”?
These kids were the exact right age when Frozen came out. This is nostalgia for twelve-year-olds, which is a wild sentence to type.
45. In “The Hunger Games,” what is the name of the main character?
The books cycle in and out of middle school reading lists, but the movies keep the character alive in the cultural memory.
46. What streaming platform is known for its original series “Stranger Things”?
They know this the way previous generations knew which network aired their favorite sitcom.
47. What is the highest-grossing animated movie of all time (as of 2024)?
This one generates real debate because kids conflate “most popular” with “highest-grossing.” The answer might surprise them.
48. What song by Luis Fonsi became one of the most-viewed YouTube videos of all time?
They were little when this song took over the world, but they remember it. The melody is involuntary at this point.
49. What is the name of SpongeBob’s pet snail?
SpongeBob transcends generations. This is the easiest point in the round for anyone who’s ever turned on a TV.
50. In the Percy Jackson series, who is Percy’s godly parent?
The Rick Riordan readers will fight someone over this. It’s their territory.
51. What planet is known as the “Red Planet”?
Easy, but it sets up the harder ones coming. Think of it as a running start.
52. What part of the plant conducts photosynthesis?
Some kids say “the stem.” Some say “the flower.” The right answer is the part that’s green, which should be a hint.
53. What is the pH of pure water?
Neutral. Seven. Right in the middle. This is one of those facts that sticks once you hear it, but getting there the first time requires actual knowledge.
54. What do you call an animal that eats both plants and meat?
Herbivore, carnivore, omnivore. The vocabulary of every food web poster ever taped to a classroom wall.
55. What is the closest star to Earth?
“Polaris!” “Sirius!” I’ve heard a dozen wrong answers for this one. The real answer is so obvious it loops back around to tricky.
56. What is the process by which liquid water turns into water vapor?
Water cycle vocabulary. They’ve drawn the diagram a dozen times.
57. How many planets in our solar system have rings?
Everyone knows about Saturn’s rings. Fewer know that Saturn isn’t alone in having them.
58. What element does “O” represent on the periodic table?
Straightforward, but it anchors them for harder chemistry questions later.
59. What is the term for an animal that is active at night?
Owls, bats, raccoons. The word is on the tip of their tongue.
60. True or false: sound can travel through outer space.
“In space, no one can hear you scream” isn’t just a movie tagline. It’s physics.
61. What type of rock is formed by volcanic activity?
Igneous, sedimentary, metamorphic. The rock cycle trio. This one’s about lava.
62. What is the largest mammal on Earth?
Not just the largest mammal. The largest animal that has ever lived, period. Bigger than any dinosaur. That fact alone changes how kids think about the ocean.
63. What vitamin does your body produce when exposed to sunlight?
Health class meets science class. A lot of kids know this from their parents telling them to go outside.
64. What is the name for a scientist who studies fossils?
Every kid who went through a dinosaur phase knows this word. The question is whether they remember it now that they’re “too cool” for dinosaurs.
65. How long does it take for light from the Sun to reach Earth?
The guesses on this one range from “instantly” to “a whole day.” The real answer sits in a sweet spot that makes the scale of space feel real for the first time.
66. What ancient civilization built the pyramids at Giza?
Easy, but it sets the table. History trivia works best when you build from the known to the unknown.
67. Who was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean?
Her disappearance is what most kids know about her. But this accomplishment came first, and it’s worth centering.
68. What was the name of the ship that brought the Pilgrims to America in 1620?
Thanksgiving pageant knowledge, deeply embedded.
69. The Great Wall of China was primarily built to protect against invasions from which direction?
Most kids know the Wall exists. Fewer have thought about why it’s where it is and what it was trying to keep out.
70. What did Martin Luther King Jr. famously say he had in his most well-known speech?
They’ve heard the clip. They’ve read excerpts. The phrase is burned into the culture.
71. What empire was ruled by Julius Caesar?
Technically he was never emperor , he was dictator. But for middle school trivia purposes, the empire question stands.
72. In what decade did humans first land on the Moon?
They know 1969 or they know “the sixties.” Either way, this one lands clean.
73. What ancient Greek city-state was known for its powerful military and warrior culture?
Athens gets the credit for democracy and philosophy. This city got a whole movie franchise about abs.
74. Who invented the telephone?
The traditional answer is Alexander Graham Bell, though history has gotten more complicated on this one. For middle school purposes, Bell is the expected answer, but the story is worth knowing.
75. What was the period called when art, science, and culture flourished in Europe after the Middle Ages?
The word literally means “rebirth.” That detail helps the ones who are reaching for it.
76. What is the only country that spans both Europe and Asia as a transcontinental nation with major cities on both continents?
Russia is the obvious guess, and it’s technically transcontinental, but this question is about having major cultural and population centers on both sides.
77. What is the driest continent on Earth?
Africa? Australia? Nope. The answer defies what “dry” looks like in most people’s imaginations because they associate dryness with heat.
78. What U.S. state is the largest by area?
Texas wishes.
79. On which continent is the Sahara Desert located?
Straightforward, but it sets up the next question perfectly.
80. What is the largest desert in the world?
“The Sahara!” Every time. And every time, the room goes silent when they hear the real answer. The definition of “desert” is doing the heavy lifting here.
81. What two countries share the longest international border in the world?
The answer makes geographic sense once you look at a map, but most kids haven’t thought about it.
82. What is the capital of Australia?
It’s not Sydney. It’s not Melbourne. This is one of the most satisfying wrong-answer moments in all of geography trivia.
83. What is the tallest mountain in the world?
Everyone knows this one. But do they know how tall it is? That’s the follow-up that separates the room.
84. What country has the most people?
This answer actually changed recently, which makes it a great conversation starter.
85. What river flows through the Grand Canyon?
A lot of kids have seen pictures of the Grand Canyon without ever thinking about what carved it.
86. What is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature?
If they’ve ever seen a thermometer break (or a video of one), they know this. The silver stuff that moves like nothing else.
87. What is the term for the distance light travels in one year?
It sounds like a unit of time. It’s not. That confusion is exactly what makes it a good trivia question.
88. What is the largest internal organ in the human body?
I asked about the largest organ earlier (the skin). This one specifies internal, which changes the answer completely. The kids who remember that earlier question feel like detectives.
89. What does DNA stand for?
They’ve heard the abbreviation a thousand times. Spelling out the full name is another matter entirely.
90. What is the name for the study of earthquakes?
The “-ology” suffix helps, but only if they know the root word.
91. What country is home to the Great Sphinx?
If they got the pyramid question, they’ll get this. If they didn’t, this is their redemption arc.
92. What is the name for a group of stars that forms a recognizable pattern?
Orion. The Big Dipper. They know examples. The category name sometimes escapes them under pressure.
93. What is the main gas that makes up the Sun?
The Sun is basically a giant ball of this stuff, fusing it into helium and releasing energy in the process.
94. What is the term for an organism that makes its own food using sunlight?
Producer, autotroph , either answer works. The science vocabulary here is what trips people up.
95. What is the name of the layer of gases surrounding Earth?
They breathe it every day. Naming it is another thing.
96. What is 15% of 200?
Mental math under pressure. Some kids freeze. Some kids thrive. The split is always entertaining.
97. What is the next prime number after 7?
Nine tempts everyone. But nine has a secret: it’s divisible by three.
98. What is the perimeter of a square with sides that are 9 cm each?
Four sides, same length. The formula is simple. The pressure makes it feel hard.
99. What is the Roman numeral for 50?
I, V, X, L, C, D, M. Most kids know the first few. L is where a lot of them start guessing.
100. How many degrees are in a right angle?
The hundredth question should be a breather. Here it is.
101. What is the name of the process where rocks are broken down by wind, water, and ice?
Earth science vocabulary. The word is on the tip of their tongue, right next to “erosion,” which is the related but different process that carries the broken bits away.
102. What famous speech begins with “Four score and seven years ago”?
A “score” is twenty years. So four score and seven is eighty-seven. That math alone makes some kids perk up.
103. What is the currency of Japan?
Anime fans know this one cold. Everyone else takes a guess.
104. What is the name for a word that is spelled the same forward and backward?
Racecar. Level. Kayak. The examples are more fun than the word itself.
105. What percentage of Earth’s surface is covered by water?
The answer is approximate, but the ballpark is what matters. Most kids guess too low.
106. What is the name of the scale used to measure the strength of earthquakes?
There’s actually more than one scale, but for middle school, one name dominates.
107. What is the freezing point of water in degrees Celsius?
Clean, quick. A palate cleanser between harder questions.
108. What is the name for a government ruled by a king or queen?
Social studies vocab. The word sounds like what it is.
109. In what year did World War II end?
The start date (1939 in Europe, 1941 for the U.S.) gets more attention in class. The end date sometimes gets fuzzy.
110. What is the name of the pigment that gives plants their green color?
Chloroplast and chlorophyll get mixed up constantly. This question forces them to pick the right one.
111. What is the tallest animal in the world?
The answer is obvious and delightful. Sometimes trivia doesn’t need to be tricky.
112. What is the name for the boundary between two tectonic plates?
Plate tectonics. One of those topics that makes geology feel like a thriller.
113. What organ in the human body is responsible for filtering blood?
You have two of them. They’re about the size of your fist. And they process about 50 gallons of blood a day.
114. What is the name of the famous clock tower in London?
Trick question territory. “Big Ben” is technically the bell inside, not the tower itself. But for middle school trivia, we accept it.
115. What is the term for an animal that only eats plants?
The trio again: herbivore, carnivore, omnivore. This time we’re going green.
116. What is the smallest unit of life?
Cell theory, lesson one, day one. The foundation of biology.
117. What explorer is credited with discovering America in 1492?
The word “credited” is doing work in this question, and the more thoughtful kids notice it. Columbus didn’t discover a place where millions of people already lived, but he’s the traditional answer to this traditional question.
118. What are the primary colors of light?
Not the same as the primary colors of paint. This catches people off guard every single time.
119. What is the name of the galaxy that contains our solar system?
They’ve seen pictures of it. They’ve heard the name. Connecting the two under pressure is the challenge.
120. What is the literary term for the main character in a story?
English class vocabulary. The word comes from Greek, meaning “first actor.”
121. What number does the Roman numeral “C” represent?
Century. Cent. The root word is the hint. Some kids get there. Some don’t.
122. What is the only bone in the human body that isn’t connected to another bone?
This one gets audible reactions. It floats in your throat right now, held in place by muscles and ligaments, touching nothing else in your skeleton.
123. What phenomenon causes the sky to appear blue?
“Because of the ocean” is the most common wrong answer I get from this age group, and honestly, the logic isn’t terrible. The real answer involves physics that most adults can’t fully explain either.
124. What country has won the most FIFA World Cup titles?
The soccer kids will nail this. Everyone else is guessing between about four countries. The real answer has five stars on their jersey for a reason.
125. If you’re standing at the North Pole, every direction you can walk is which direction?
I save this one for last because it does something to a room. You can see the exact moment the logic clicks. Some kids get it instantly and their eyes go wide. Others argue about it for five minutes before the lightbulb hits. It’s not about knowledge. It’s about thinking differently for a second. And that’s what the best trivia does. It doesn’t just test what you know. It rearranges how you see something you thought you understood.
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