60 Random Trivia Questions That Will Start at Least Three Arguments
These random trivia questions have been tested in real rooms on real people. Some of them will make you feel brilliant. Most of them won't.
The hardest trivia question I’ve ever seen someone get wrong was “What color is a school bus?” The person said orange. And here’s the thing: they weren’t entirely wrong. The official color is actually “National School Bus Glossy Yellow,” a shade deliberately chosen in 1939 because it’s visible in early morning peripheral vision. But the answer everyone expects is yellow, and somehow that confident pause before saying “orange” created the loudest moment of the entire night.
That’s what easy trivia questions and answers actually are. They’re not warm-ups. They’re traps dressed in comfortable clothes. The easier a question sounds, the less time your brain spends checking its work, and that’s exactly when you blurt out something you’ll be teased about for years. I’ve hosted hundreds of trivia nights, and the rounds that generate the most noise, the most table arguments, the most phones slammed face-down in vindication are almost always the “easy” ones.
These 125 questions are built for that. Some of them you’ll breeze through. Some of them will make you pause longer than you’d like to admit. And a few of them are going to start a conversation at your table that outlasts the quiz itself.
1. How many continents are there?
I use this as a first question at events because it feels like a gift. Then someone at a back table says “depends on who you ask” and suddenly we’re having a geopolitics discussion before the second round.
2. What planet is closest to the Sun?
This one lands clean every time. No tricks, no traps. Just a moment of quiet relief before things get interesting.
3. What is the largest ocean on Earth?
The Pacific is so large it contains its own antipodal point. Meaning there are spots in the Pacific where if you drilled straight through the Earth, you’d come out in the Pacific again.
4. How many legs does a spider have?
Eight. And yet I’ve watched a grown adult with a biology degree hold up six fingers at a pub quiz. The beer had been flowing, in fairness.
5. What gas do plants absorb from the atmosphere?
The number of people who say oxygen here tells you everything about how deep the photosynthesis lesson actually stuck.
6. What is the boiling point of water in Fahrenheit?
Americans nail this instantly. Everyone else does a quick mental conversion and second-guesses themselves.
7. How many colors are in a standard rainbow?
Roy G. Biv is doing a lot of heavy lifting in the collective memory. The real question is whether indigo actually deserves a spot, and Newton only included it because he wanted seven colors to match the musical scale.
8. What do bees produce that humans eat?
Someone once answered “wax” at one of my events and I genuinely didn’t know what to do with that.
9. What is the tallest animal in the world?
Nobody gets this wrong. But it’s worth asking just to see how fast people answer. The speed of an easy question tells you who’s competitive and who’s cautious.
10. What fruit is traditionally used to make wine?
I’ve gotten pushback from home brewers who insist you can make wine from anything. They’re right. But that’s not the question.
11. What is the chemical symbol for gold?
Au, from the Latin “aurum.” This is where people who took chemistry nod smugly and people who didn’t say “Go” or “Gd” and look confused when they’re wrong.
12. How many sides does a hexagon have?
Six. The prefix tells you everything, but I’ve seen people mix up hexagon and octagon more times than I can count.
13. What is the hardest natural substance on Earth?
Diamond. And someone will always say “my ex’s heart,” which gets a laugh exactly once per venue.
14. What does the “E” stand for in E = mc²?
Energy. But the follow-up “what does the m stand for?” catches more people than you’d expect.
15. What is the largest organ in the human body?
This is one of those questions where the answer feels like it can’t be right. The skin. People want it to be the liver or the lungs. But your skin, stretched out flat, covers about 20 square feet.
16. What type of animal is a Komodo dragon?
A lizard. Specifically a monitor lizard. Not a dragon, obviously, but I’ve had kids at family trivia events look genuinely disappointed.
17. What is the smallest prime number?
People say 1 with absolute certainty. It’s 2. And the argument about why 1 isn’t prime can eat twenty minutes of a game night if you let it.
18. What are the three states of matter taught in elementary school?
Solid, liquid, gas. Plasma fans, I see you. You’re right that there are more. But we’re talking about what Mrs. Henderson taught in third grade.
19. What is the speed of light, roughly, in miles per second?
This is the first question in this set where I expect blank stares. People know it’s fast. They don’t know the number.
20. How many bones does an adult human body have?
206. Babies have around 270, which fuse together as they grow. That fact alone is worth the price of admission.
21. What is the capital of Australia?
This is my favorite easy question in all of trivia. Nearly everyone says Sydney. Some say Melbourne. The answer is Canberra, and the groan that follows is the most reliable sound in any trivia room.
22. What is the longest river in the world?
This actually depends on how you measure. The Nile has traditionally held the title, but recent surveys suggest the Amazon might be longer. I accept either. The argument is the point.
23. What country has the most people?
This answer changed recently. India overtook China in 2023. If someone confidently says China, they’re not wrong historically. They’re just a year late.
24. On which continent is Egypt located?
Africa. But the Sinai Peninsula is technically in Asia, which means Egypt is transcontinental. Nobody expects that wrinkle.
25. What is the smallest country in the world by area?
Vatican City. It’s about 121 acres. For reference, that’s roughly the size of the average golf course.
26. What ocean lies between the United States and the United Kingdom?
The Atlantic. This is a breath question. Let people have it.
27. What is the capital of Canada?
Another one where the biggest city steals the spotlight. Toronto and Vancouver get shouted out constantly. Ottawa sits there, quietly being the capital, unbothered.
28. What U.S. state is the largest by area?
Alaska. And it’s not close. You could fit Texas into Alaska more than twice. Texans don’t love hearing that.
29. What mountain is the tallest in the world, measured from sea level?
Everest. But if you measure from base to peak, Mauna Kea in Hawaii is taller. Most of it is just underwater, which feels like cheating but technically isn’t.
30. What country is shaped like a boot?
Italy. This is the kind of question that makes a seven-year-old feel like a genius, and that’s exactly the right energy for it.
31. What is the name of the fictional wizarding school in Harry Potter?
Hogwarts. The real test is whether someone can name all four houses without pausing. Ravenclaw is always the one that takes an extra second.
32. In the movie The Lion King, what is the name of Simba’s father?
Mufasa. Say it out loud. It carries weight. James Earl Jones gave that name a gravity that still makes grown adults emotional.
33. What superhero is also known as the “Man of Steel”?
Superman. But the number of people who hesitate, wondering if it’s somehow Iron Man, is higher than you’d think.
34. What is the name of the toy cowboy in Toy Story?
Woody. And Buzz Lightyear is right there on the tip of everyone’s tongue as a competing answer, even though the question clearly says cowboy.
35. What animated movie features a clownfish searching for his son?
Finding Nemo. I once had someone answer Finding Dory, which is the sequel, and the table spent five minutes debating whether that counted. It didn’t.
36. What is the name of Mickey Mouse’s dog?
Pluto. And the existential question of why Pluto is a pet while Goofy is a person has been keeping the internet busy for decades.
37. What social media platform has a bird as its original logo?
Twitter. Or X, depending on how attached you are to the rebrand. The bird’s name was Larry, by the way. Named after Larry Bird.
38. In what decade was the first iPhone released?
The 2000s. Specifically 2007. It feels like it should be more recent, but it’s been around longer than some of the people answering this question.
39. What is the highest-grossing film of all time (not adjusted for inflation)?
Avatar. Not Avengers: Endgame, which held the title briefly before Avatar was re-released. This one starts arguments in rooms full of Marvel fans.
40. What band sang “Bohemian Rhapsody”?
Queen. And the percentage of people who can actually sing the whole thing from memory is much lower than the percentage who claim they can.
41. What is the main ingredient in guacamole?
Avocado. This is a layup. Enjoy it.
42. What Italian dish is made of wide, flat pasta layered with sauce and cheese?
Lasagna. The debate about whether the plural is “lasagnas” or “lasagne” is one I refuse to moderate.
43. What country is sushi originally from?
Japan. Though the concept of preserving fish in fermented rice actually originated in Southeast Asia and migrated to Japan centuries ago. Nobody wants to hear that at a trivia night, but it’s true.
44. What nut is used to make marzipan?
Almonds. This catches people who’ve eaten marzipan their whole lives without ever wondering what it’s made of.
45. What is the most consumed beverage in the world after water?
Tea. Not coffee. This is one of the great easy-question upsets. Coffee drinkers take it personally.
46. What vitamin is abundantly found in oranges?
Vitamin C. Though bell peppers actually have more vitamin C per serving than oranges do. Oranges just have better PR.
47. What grain is most commonly used to make bread?
Wheat. Simple. Clean. Moving on.
48. What is the spiciest part of a chili pepper?
The white pith (the membrane inside), not the seeds. Almost everyone says seeds. The seeds only seem hot because they’re touching the pith.
49. What country does Parmesan cheese originally come from?
Italy. Specifically the Parma region, which is right there in the name if you’re paying attention.
50. What is the main ingredient in hummus?
Chickpeas. “Hummus” literally means “chickpeas” in Arabic. The dish is essentially named after its own ingredient.
51. What is a group of lions called?
A pride. Animal group names are trivia gold because people either know them instantly or have absolutely no idea. There’s no middle ground.
52. What is the fastest land animal?
The cheetah. It can hit 70 mph in short bursts. But it can only maintain that for about 20 to 30 seconds before it overheats, which makes it less of a runner and more of a sprinter with terrible endurance.
53. How many hearts does an octopus have?
Three. Two pump blood to the gills, one pumps it to the rest of the body. And when it swims, the main heart actually stops beating, which is why octopuses prefer crawling.
54. What is the only mammal capable of true flight?
Bats. Flying squirrels glide. Bats actually fly. That distinction matters more than you’d think in a competitive trivia setting.
55. What color is a polar bear’s skin underneath its fur?
Black. Their fur is actually transparent and hollow, not white. It just looks white because of the way it reflects light. This answer always gets a reaction.
56. What is the largest species of shark?
The whale shark. It’s also the largest fish of any kind. And it’s a filter feeder, which means the biggest shark in the ocean is basically harmless to humans.
57. What animal is known as “man’s best friend”?
Dog. This is a palate cleanser. You need these between the trickier ones.
58. How long is an elephant’s pregnancy, roughly?
About 22 months. Nearly two years. I’ve seen this question make an entire table of parents wince in sympathy.
59. What is a baby kangaroo called?
A joey. And when it’s born, it’s about the size of a grape. That fact never fails to make a room go quiet for a second.
60. Do penguins live at the North Pole or the South Pole?
South Pole (Antarctica). There are zero penguins at the North Pole. Polar bears are north, penguins are south. They’ve never met in the wild, despite what every holiday card suggests.
61. In what year did the Titanic sink?
1912. The movie came out in 1997, and for a whole generation, those two dates are linked in memory like they happened around the same time.
62. Who was the first President of the United States?
George Washington. Nobody gets this wrong. But I include it because it sets up a rhythm, and rhythms matter.
63. What ancient civilization built the pyramids at Giza?
The Egyptians. And no, it wasn’t aliens. Though I appreciate that someone brings this up at approximately 100% of trivia events.
64. What wall divided Berlin from 1961 to 1989?
The Berlin Wall. The question is almost a tautology, but the dates are the real test. Most people know 1989 because they’ve seen the footage. 1961 is the one that separates the casuals from the history buffs.
65. What was the name of the ship the Pilgrims sailed to America on in 1620?
The Mayflower. There were actually two ships originally. The Speedwell kept leaking and had to turn back. Imagine being on the Speedwell and knowing you missed out on becoming a Thanksgiving footnote.
66. What famous document begins with “We the People”?
The U.S. Constitution. Not the Declaration of Independence, which starts with “When in the Course of human events.” People mix these up constantly.
67. Who painted the Mona Lisa?
Leonardo da Vinci. And she’s much smaller than people expect. Only about 30 by 21 inches. The crowd in front of her at the Louvre is always bigger than the painting.
68. What year did World War II end?
1945. In Europe it ended in May, in the Pacific in August/September. If someone says 1945 without specifying, they’re right enough.
69. What explorer is credited with discovering America in 1492?
Christopher Columbus. “Credited” is doing a lot of work in that sentence, and I phrase it that way deliberately. He landed in the Caribbean, not mainland North America, and the indigenous people there had discovered it long before he showed up.
70. What empire was ruled by Julius Caesar?
The Roman Empire. Though technically, during Caesar’s time it was still the Roman Republic. He was assassinated partly because people feared he wanted to end the Republic and become a king. Which, in fairness, he kind of did.
71. How many strings does a standard guitar have?
Six. Bass guitar has four. This trips up people who play neither.
72. What instrument does a pianist play?
The piano. Yes, this is that easy. But in a room full of people, someone will overthink it and wonder if it’s a trick question. It’s not.
73. What singer is known as the “Queen of Pop”?
Madonna. Some younger players say Lady Gaga or Beyoncé, and the generational divide becomes the real entertainment.
74. What boy band released the album No Strings Attached in 2000?
NSYNC. That album sold 2.4 million copies in its first week. In 2000, that number meant something different than it does now.
75. What musical instrument has 88 keys?
A standard piano. 52 white, 36 black. If someone says keyboard, that’s close but not quite right, since keyboards can have fewer.
76. “Imagine” is a famous song by which former Beatle?
John Lennon. Released in 1971. It’s one of those songs that everyone knows but almost nobody can place the exact year.
77. What does the musical term “forte” mean?
Loud (or strong). The opposite of piano, which means soft. Which is why the instrument is technically called a pianoforte, meaning soft-loud.
78. What country is the band ABBA from?
Sweden. And the fact that a Swedish pop group became one of the best-selling acts of all time while singing in English is one of music’s great accomplishments.
79. What is the name of Elvis Presley’s famous Memphis home?
Graceland. It’s smaller than people expect when they visit, much like the Mona Lisa situation. Fame inflates things in our imagination.
80. What instrument does a drummer play?
Drums. I’m giving you this one. Consider it a mid-quiz rest stop.
81. How many players are on a standard soccer (football) team on the field at once?
11. Including the goalkeeper. This is one of those questions where confident wrong answers come in at 9, 10, or 12 and nobody can quite remember why they think that.
82. In what sport would you perform a slam dunk?
Basketball. Easy. But the term “slam dunk” has migrated so far into everyday language that I sometimes wonder if younger generations hear the sports meaning or the metaphor first.
83. What country hosted the 2016 Summer Olympics?
Brazil (Rio de Janeiro). This feels recent until you realize it was almost a decade ago.
84. What sport is played at Wimbledon?
Tennis. And the strawberries and cream served there are as much a part of the identity as the tennis itself.
85. How many points is a touchdown worth in American football?
6. Not 7. The extra point after is a separate play. This catches people all the time, and the ones who get it wrong are usually the most passionate football fans, which makes it even better.
86. What color are the goalposts in most professional soccer leagues?
White. Nobody thinks about this until you ask, and then they have to close their eyes and picture one.
87. In baseball, how many strikes make an out?
Three. “Three strikes and you’re out” is so deeply embedded in English that non-baseball fans know this from the idiom alone.
88. What is the national sport of Canada?
Lacrosse is the national summer sport, and ice hockey is the national winter sport. If someone just says hockey, I give it to them. But the lacrosse answer is what makes this question interesting.
89. How many rings are on the Olympic flag?
Five. One for each inhabited continent in the Olympic movement’s original conception. And every national flag in the world contains at least one of the ring colors.
90. What sport does Tiger Woods play?
Golf. This is here because not every question needs to be a puzzle. Sometimes you just need to let the room breathe and feel good about themselves before the next section.
91. What is the most spoken language in the world by total number of speakers?
English, if you count native plus non-native speakers. Mandarin Chinese if you count only native speakers. I’ve seen this question cause genuine shouting matches. Specify what you mean before you ask it at your own game night.
92. What letter is most commonly used in the English language?
E. This is why it’s worth the most on Wheel of Fortune and the least in Scrabble. Its frequency is both its power and its ordinariness.
93. How many letters are in the English alphabet?
26. Though the ampersand (&) was once considered the 27th letter. Children used to recite “X, Y, Z, and per se and” at the end of the alphabet, which eventually slurred into the word “ampersand.”
94. What is the longest word in the English language that has no repeated letters?
“Uncopyrightable” is the most commonly cited one at 15 letters. People try to think of long words and immediately realize how many repeated letters most words have.
95. What punctuation mark ends a question?
A question mark. I put this here because after that last question, you deserve something you don’t have to think about.
96. What word means the opposite of “ancient”?
Modern. Or new. Or contemporary. This is the kind of open-ended question that works better in conversation than on a scorecard.
97. What is a word that sounds the same as another word but has a different meaning and spelling called?
A homophone. “There,” “their,” and “they’re” are the classic example, and they’ve caused more internet arguments than any political topic.
98. What language do they primarily speak in Brazil?
Portuguese. Not Spanish. This is one of the most commonly missed “easy” questions in all of trivia. People assume South America equals Spanish, and Brazil sits there being the exception to the rule.
99. What does “www” stand for in a website address?
World Wide Web. This feels like a relic from a time when we actually typed it out. Most browsers don’t even require it anymore.
100. How many syllables are in the word “banana”?
Three. Ba-na-na. But say it slowly enough and you’ll start to wonder if that’s actually right, which is the whole point of this section.
101. What color do you get when you mix red and white?
Pink. This is a kindergarten question that adults answer with the same speed and confidence they had at five years old. Some knowledge doesn’t decay.
102. What month has the fewest days?
February. With 28, or 29 in a leap year. And yet it somehow feels longer than any month in winter.
103. What is the currency of Japan?
The yen. Not to be confused with the yuan (China) or the won (Korea). Asian currency names trip people up more than European ones.
104. How many days are in a leap year?
366. The extra day goes to February, which finally gets its due every four years.
105. What shape is a stop sign?
An octagon. Most people know this. But ask them how many sides an octagon has right after, and you’ll see the gears turn.
106. What does a thermometer measure?
Temperature. Some people say heat, which is close but not the same thing. Temperature is a measurement. Heat is energy. The difference matters in physics, less so at a bar quiz.
107. What is the largest desert in the world?
Antarctica. Not the Sahara. A desert is defined by precipitation, not temperature. Antarctica gets less than 8 inches of precipitation a year, making it the largest desert on Earth. This answer makes people visibly annoyed.
108. What two colors make up the flag of Japan?
White and red. One of the most minimalist national flags in the world, and one of the most instantly recognizable.
109. What does “GPS” stand for?
Global Positioning System. People use it every day and most have never thought about what the letters mean.
110. Who wrote the play Romeo and Juliet?
William Shakespeare. If someone gets this wrong at your trivia night, the question isn’t about trivia anymore. It’s about the education system.
111. What is the main language spoken in Egypt?
Arabic. Not Egyptian. Ancient Egyptian is a dead language. This one quietly sorts people who know Africa from people who know the idea of Africa.
112. What is the square root of 144?
12. Math questions in trivia are polarizing. Half the room lights up, the other half checks out. I use them sparingly and only when the number is clean.
113. What is the name of the fairy in Peter Pan?
Tinker Bell. Two words, by the way. Not one. The Disney branding has blurred this, but J.M. Barrie wrote it as two words.
114. How many zeros are in one million?
Six. 1,000,000. This is another breath question. Take it.
115. What part of the plant conducts photosynthesis?
The leaves. Specifically the chloroplasts within the leaf cells, but “leaves” is the answer that’ll get you the point.
116. What metal is liquid at room temperature?
Mercury. It’s also the only metal element whose common name doesn’t end in “-ium.” It was named after the Roman god, not the planet, though the planet was too.
117. What is the closest star to Earth?
The Sun. People immediately start thinking of distant stars and say Proxima Centauri, which is the closest star other than the Sun. But the Sun is a star. And forgetting that is one of those beautiful brain failures that makes trivia worth playing.
118. What company makes the iPhone?
Apple. This is here to let your brain relax for exactly one question.
119. What is the largest continent by area?
Asia. It’s larger than Africa, the Americas, or Europe by a wide margin. And it contains so much diversity that calling it one continent sometimes feels like an oversimplification.
120. In what organ does the body primarily digest food?
The small intestine. Not the stomach, which mostly breaks food down mechanically and with acid. The actual nutrient absorption happens in the small intestine. This one flips what most people think they know.
121. What are the primary colors in traditional color theory?
Red, blue, and yellow. If someone says red, green, and blue, they’re thinking of light (additive color), not paint (subtractive color). Both are correct in their own context, and this distinction has caused more arguments in my trivia rooms than almost any other topic.
122. What is the only continent with no permanent human population?
Antarctica. Researchers rotate through, but nobody lives there full-time in the way we mean when we say “lives there.” It’s Earth’s largest uninhabited space, and it’s bigger than Europe.
123. What famous structure was a gift from France to the United States?
The Statue of Liberty. It arrived in 350 individual pieces packed in 214 crates. Some assembly required, on a scale that would make IKEA blush.
124. What is the only food that never spoils?
Honey. Archaeologists have found 3,000-year-old honey in Egyptian tombs that was still perfectly edible. Its low moisture content and natural acidity make it basically immortal. It’s the only food on Earth that outlasts civilizations.
125. What do you call the dot over the letters “i” and “j”?
A tittle. You’ve seen this dot every day of your literate life and you never knew it had a name. I save this question for last at events because it does something no other question does: it makes people realize that the world is full of things they look at without seeing. The room always goes quiet for a second. Then someone laughs. Then everyone wants to know what other everyday things have names they’ve never heard. And that’s the best possible note to end on, because that curiosity is the whole reason anyone plays trivia in the first place.
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