The group chat ritual
One person posts their emoji row in the morning and everyone else has to beat it by lunch. Because the board is identical for all players, the comparison is fair and the trash talk writes itself.
Quiz Mode
Ten questions, one board, everyone plays the same one today. Build a streak, share your score, come back at midnight for the next.
Dealing today’s ten questions…
The Daily Trivia Challenge deals ten questions each day, and here is the twist: everyone on the planet gets the same ten. Your friend in another city, the group chat, the coworker who claims to know everything, all of them face the exact board you do. That shared board is what makes the score worth sharing. A 7 out of 10 means the same thing for everyone, so bragging rights are real.
The board mixes two topic areas every day from a rotation of history, science, technology, general knowledge, entertainment, and nature, in a fixed recipe of easy, medium, and hard questions. Answer each one, get the verdict and a one-line fact on the spot, and finish with a score card you can send anywhere as a tidy emoji row that shows your run without spoiling a single answer.
Come back tomorrow and the streak counter starts working for you. Play on consecutive days and watch it climb, miss a day and it resets, which is exactly the kind of gentle pressure that turns one visit into a habit. Your streak, best score, and results live only in your browser. There is no account, no sign-up, and nothing stored on a server.
One play per day keeps it honest. When you finish, the page shows a countdown to the next board at midnight UTC, and if the wait is unbearable there is a practice link to the endless general knowledge quiz where nothing is at stake.
One person posts their emoji row in the morning and everyone else has to beat it by lunch. Because the board is identical for all players, the comparison is fair and the trash talk writes itself.
Ten questions take about two minutes with coffee. It is a small daily win before the day starts, and the streak counter quietly turns it into a routine you do not want to break.
Teachers project the day's board as students settle in. Everyone answers together, the explanations spark quick discussions, and tomorrow brings a new set without any preparation.
Pass one phone around the table, alternate questions, and argue warmly about the ones everyone got wrong. The single daily board keeps the game short enough to finish before dessert.
A team channel where everyone posts their row builds a friendly league with zero setup. Monday's perfect ten becomes the story of the week.
Next spins
Good answers
Yes. The board is derived from the date itself, so every player worldwide sees the same ten questions in the same order until midnight UTC, when a new board is dealt.
At midnight UTC every day. The result screen shows a live countdown, so you always know exactly how long until the next board.
One official play per day keeps scores comparable. After finishing you can practice on the endless general knowledge quiz, which never repeats thanks to its shuffled question bags.
Finish a board today and again tomorrow and your streak grows by one. Skip a day and it resets. Streaks, best scores, and results are stored only in your browser.
No. There is nothing to sign up for and nothing stored on a server. Clearing your browser data clears your streak, so treat it kindly.
From the site's hand-checked question banks covering history, science, technology, general knowledge, entertainment, and nature, with every answer and hint verified before it ships.
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