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HomeNewsGames NewsQuiz games: the best trivia board games that aren’t Trivial Pursuit

Quiz games: the best trivia board games that aren’t Trivial Pursuit

In search of the best quiz games and trivia board games to tax your brain? We don’t blame you! Trivia offers a whole lot of fun, from showing off the obscure information stored in your head to laughing at each other’s outlandish guesses. It always feels good to test your knowledge, and it probably doesn’t need saying, but well-made quiz games have an unnatural ability to spark competitiveness like nothing else in the world.

We’ve all played Trivial Pursuit, but are you familiar with the scores of other quiz games and trivia board games that are out there? Tabletop designers have found a ton of ways to put a fresh spin on the formula – from interesting themes to extra mechanics that add a layer of strategy to the gameplay. There are even quiz games designed to level the playing field, so those who normally struggle with the genre have a fighting chance.

In the last year, so many people have rediscovered their enjoyment of quizzes while looking for online lockdown activities. If you were among them, now’s the time to put your upgraded trivia skills to the test.

Keep reading to discover ten of the best quiz board games money can buy. Get ready to flex that grey matter! First up though, let’s see what we’re dealing with.

These are the best quiz games and trivia board games: 

Wits & Wagers

A party game of two halves – in Wits & Wagers you’re not entirely dependent on your ‘wits’. In fact, you can still succeed without any general knowledge at all, provided you make the right ‘wagers’.

Educated guesses and smart betting are key here

The questions here are outlandish enough that everyone is likely to be relying on educated guesses much of the time – especially since all answers are numerical, so the closest wins. The interesting part is that, before a correct answer is revealed, players get to see each other’s answers. They then have a chance to bet, using poker-style chips, on who they think has won. Sure, you get some chips for a correct answer – but there are greater rewards up for grabs for savvy gamblers.

In Wits & Wagers, you don’t have to be the most knowledgeable in the room, you just have to know who is – judge your friends’ areas of interest, or make blind guesstimations and hope fate smiles on you. All this makes Wits & Wagers a kinder trivia game for the uninitiated, and it also avoids the elimination drawback of many gambling games; players get to keep two chips regardless of how their betting goes.

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Death by Trivia

Seldom does a trivia game have the power of life and death over its players, but, as the name suggests, Death by Trivia is the exception that proves the rule. A true crime fan’s perfect game: question cards each have a gruesome murder-based theme, from ‘corrosion’ to ‘skinning’. Yuck!

Get enough wrong answers and you’re officially dead. But once you depart the land of the living, you can drag your opponents down with you like a malicious spectre who’s bad at quizzes, asking them questions from a special deck where a single wrong answer results in instant fatality.

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With its ‘last player standing’ gameplay, Death by Trivia does a good job of injecting tension into an ordinarily low-key genre.

As the game goes on, the number of dead players increases, meaning there are more and more chances for immediate death. That makes for a trivia game that never drags. Rather, it accelerates to its bloody conclusion.

Death by Trivia Death by Trivia Death by Trivia Amazon $25.00 Buy now Network N earns commission from qualifying purchases via Amazon Associates and other programs.

Shot in the Dark

It’s the worst feeling when a quiz category comes up that’s a massive blind spot for you. Everyone else starts merrily scribbling away as you make desperate guess after desperate guess, debating sneaking off to the loo when it’s time to mark answers. In Shot in the Dark, that’s a total non-issue: guessing is the order of the day.

Shot in the Dark gives the trivia-less a fighting chance

Designed to give the trivia-less an equal chance, Shot in the Dark asks questions like “what was the population in 1AD?” – carefully crafted so that no one will know the answer, but everyone can have fun taking a stab at it. This might seem like a gimmick that would get old fast, but – because the questions are well-designed and often ridiculous, and the answers surprising and often amusing – it actually has considerable staying power. It also comes in a compact, pocketable box, perfect for taking to the pub or a friend’s house – perhaps that friend who keeps kicking your ass at quiz games…

Pointless

The board game version of the popular BBC TV quiz show, Pointless is all about answering trivia questions correctly, while also trying to find the most obscure answers possible.

Each potential answer to questions like “Name a word ending in -eek” has an associated point value, based on the number of people who managed to blurt it out when 100 were asked the same thing. Well-known solutions will lie in the 80s or 90s, and you’ll need seriously niche knowledge to hit single digits, or to find one of the elusive ‘pointless’ answers from which the game takes its name.

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The board game is a very faithful recreation, with four rounds lifted from the game show, and an optional app that simulates the Pointless countdown.

It even comes with a plastic trophy, so for some silly fun you can lean into it and have your own little quiz show experience. More importantly, the gameplay of Pointless works in the living room or pub just as well as it does in a TV studio (hence the series’ lasting popularity).

The Game of Wolf

There are two kinds of trivia fan: the pack member who prefers working with a team, and the lone wolf who wants to showboat and display their individual knowledge. This quiz game of rapidly changing loyalties caters to both.

Honourable mentions

Honourable mentions

Wit’s End – A strong alternative to Trivial Pursuit. Questions are multiple choice and the game has a good variety of different question styles.

BezzerWizzer – A quiz game with great variety. BezzerWizzer lets you swap categories with your opponent, creating a level of decision-making and strategy.

In The Game of Wolf, on your turn, you’ll first view the topic for that round. You then decide, based on which of the players you think will be the best asset, on a pack member to join you in answering those questions. The unpicked players will form the opposing team, and you’ll need to best them to score points. However, you can also double your score for the round by going it alone and taking on everyone at once with your superior trivia skills.

More so than straight trivia knowledge, this game rewards understanding the strengths of everyone at the table. You might know a lot about baseball players, but if Jimmy McSportsfan is in your game group, can you really risk leaving them out of your pack?

One advantage of The Game of Wolf compared to Trivial Pursuit is that the trivia topics are extremely varied, ranging from Birds of Prey to Beyoncé. That means everyone should have a chance to shine, but no one will be able to go it alone every time.

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Linkee

The party quiz game Linkee is all about building connections. Each card holds four trivia questions, the answers to each of which will be related in some way. Getting those answers right isn’t important, though; finding the link between them is all that’s needed to win the card. These cards each have a letter on the back, and the first person or team to have enough to spell out the word ‘Linkee’ is crowned the champion.

One thing that adds a level of strategy to Linkee is that you only get one guess per card, and can make it at any time, as the four questions are read out one by one.

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Do you wait until all four are revealed, to make sure you’re right about that link – or take a risk and shout your answer out early, in order to grab a vital letter? You can trade duplicate letters in order to remove an opponent’s card, too – so hi-jinx and rivalries naturally develop as the game goes on.

As with many games where you’re racing to be first, Linkee is perfect for families. It’s quick and can be picked up by new players in seconds, so it also makes for an ideal ice-breaker or a starter game for a board game night.

Linkee Linkee Linkee Amazon $20.00 $14.88 Buy now Network N earns commission from qualifying purchases via Amazon Associates and other programs.

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Timeline

History; it’s a funny thing, eh? Just one thing after another, or so they say. In Timeline, players strive to slot their own event cards – each depicting a famous historical event – into a shared timeline. This history-em-up has you competing to be the first to deplete your hand by correctly guessing the order of events and where your cards fit in.

Timeline’s history trivia gets trickier as play goes on

Timeline has surprising depth for such a simple concept. Because the timeline gets more and more cluttered as the game goes on, turns become increasingly trickier, which means finding the right order to play your cards is vital for success. This is based not just on your own history knowledge, but also on the cards your opponents are laying, and therefore the parts of the timeline that are the busiest. Almost all trivia games have a bit of a replayability issue, and Timeline is no exception. Play a few times and you’ll naturally become familiar with many of the dates which might catch a newbie out. However, if you can overlook that, Timeline is a hit. It comes in a handily portable tin, and there are multiple variations to breathe some new life in, focusing on different topics, from famous inventions to cinema history.

Timeline Timeline Timeline Amazon $9.99 Buy now Network N earns commission from qualifying purchases via Amazon Associates and other programs.

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I Should Have Known That

Full of easy questions designed to make you kick yourself, I Should Have Known That is another trivia game for people who aren’t trivia aficionados.

Almost all the questions are common knowledge: stuff like “Is a penguin a bird?” – so, while playing, you can’t avoid the notion (tauntingly reflected by the front of the box) that you really should have all the answers.

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In keeping with the theme, you’re never rewarded points for correct guesses. Instead, points are subtracted for getting it wrong. These penalties differ, and, when you get a big minus score, it feels hilariously like your quiz board game is judging you.

Some questions are definitely trickier than others, so I Should Have Known That is great at making you paranoid, second guessing yourself, wondering if an obvious answer is a trap. A slight criticism: it’s clearly designed for a US audience. If you’re not from the States, there are a few questions that will likely fall flat, but it’s easy enough to skip past these.

I Should Have Known That I Should Have Known That I Should Have Known That Amazon $20.00 buy now Network N earns commission from qualifying purchases via Amazon Associates and other programs.

Fauna

Just how long is a monkey’s tail? That’s the kind of hard-hitting question you’ll be pondering in Fauna, a must-have for animal lovers looking to put their zoology knowledge to the test.

Fauna is beautiful, an excellent quiz game for kids

Each round, players try to size up one of 360 animal species, placing cubes on a game board depicting a world map, to make guesses on everything from weight to habitat. Cubes can’t be placed in the same spot as someone else’s – so you’ve got to prioritise the answers you feel most strongly about, before someone poaches your spot. Educational, colourful, and well-designed, Fauna is an excellent quiz game for kids. Both the board and the animal cards are beautifully illustrated, and it has a less competitive feel than most of the games on this list, serving as wholesome family fun.

If you’re not wild about wildlife, Terra, from the same designer, offers much the same experience, but with more general geographical questions.

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Trivial Pursuit: Master Edition

Okay, so right about now some of you will be looking back up at the title of this article and frowning into your screens, but listen, we couldn’t really have a best trivia board games list without properly honouring the great-granddaddy of the genre, could we?

There’s a reason Trivial Pursuit has stood the test of time: it’s a familiar, reliable quiz game classic. Sometimes you take someone to a sumptuous buffet and they just want to eat beans on toast.

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If that’s you, and after seeing everything else that’s out there you’re hankering for some tried and true Trivial Pursuit, it ought to be the best possible version.

Out of all the myriad Trivial Pursuit variants (there are so many, oh my) our pick for best in show is the Master Edition. With a larger number of questions, a refined but familiar design, and the addition of a timer, it keeps enough the same, while being an all-round improvement on the classic version.

Trivial Pursuit: Master Edition Trivial Pursuit: Master Edition Trivial Pursuit: Master Edition Amazon $39.40 buy now Network N earns commission from qualifying purchases via Amazon Associates and other programs.

Source: Wargamer

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