Guess the Flag
Guess the Flag
5 free games left today
Guess the Flag flips the classic flag quiz around. Instead of naming the country behind a flag, you get the country first and four flags to choose from. It sounds easier, but it forces you to recall what a flag actually looks like rather than just recognizing it, and that is a much stronger test of memory.
The game covers 195+ countries. Distractor flags are picked to keep you honest, so expect to choose between similar tricolors and near-identical color schemes. Each game has ten questions, answers are checked instantly, and a wrong pick highlights the correct flag so the round still teaches you something.
You can play on any device with a browser. No app, no registration, no waiting: the first question is one tap away. Scores appear at the end of each round with a share button, so you can challenge friends to beat your result on the same day. If you prefer the classic direction, the Flags Quiz shows the flag first, and the flag reference page lists every flag of the world in one sortable table for study between rounds.
How to play
- Press Play. A country name appears with four flags below it.
- Tap the flag you believe belongs to that country. The correct flag lights up green.
- Complete ten questions, review your score, then replay or share your result.
Frequently asked questions
How is guess the flag different from a normal flag quiz?
The direction is reversed. A normal flag quiz shows a flag and asks for the country. Guess the Flag names the country and asks you to pick the correct flag from four images.
How many questions are in one game?
Ten questions per game. Countries are drawn at random from 195+ options, so every game uses a different mix.
Can I play guess the flag without creating an account?
Yes. No login is ever needed to play. You get five free games a day on your device; premium removes that limit.
Why do some options look almost identical?
Flags within a region often share colors and layouts. The game includes these look-alikes on purpose because telling them apart is what makes you genuinely good at flags.