What in the World? starts you out with a modest number of hints, and as you complete the trivia puzzles, you earn additional hints. Hints include removing letters from the mix that are not needed and adding one letter to the answer. Each picture requires you to spell out the answer (yes, spelling counts) with hints available to help point you in the right direction. Pictures are presented in somewhat minimalist fashion, with key words or features removed that would make them too easy to identify. Pictures are scattered across six levels that progressively become more difficult. They range from the classics to kidlit to books in pop culture.What in the World? includes hundreds of pictures to identify from topics ranging from television and movies, characters, brand logos and countries and cities. These are all questions that were either on Who Wants To Be a Millionaire? or were written by show’s team as examples. If you’ve ever thought that you could bring home the jackpot on a trivia show, provided it was all literary questions, here’s a challenge for you. I don’t get them all right, but I can compete with the contestants, which is good enough for me. The one place I can compete, though, are those precious bookish or literary questions. “I could be on this show,” I think, conveniently forgetting that for every 1 right answer I yell at the TV, there are 10 questions I couldn’t even guess at. There’s nothing quite like watching Jeopardy or Who Wants To Be a Millionaire? and actually knowing some of the answers - especially if the contestants get it wrong. Danika spends most of her time talking about queer women books at the Lesbrary.
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