Trivia Crack takes the classic living-room board game format and turns it into a browser sprint. Instead of memorizing one subject, you're pulled across six wildly different categories in the same match — science and nature one turn, entertainment or history the next, sports and geography waiting right behind them. The genius of the format is that nobody stays comfortable for long; the player who knows every capital city on Earth still has to sweat through a pop-culture question two spins later. It rewards the generalist over the specialist, which is exactly what makes matches feel unpredictable even between the same two players.
Click the wheel to spin it and land on one of the six category slices. A question from that category pops up with four possible answers — pick the one you're most confident in before the round moves on. Answer correctly and you earn a "character" piece for that category; collect all six and you complete your character, which is the actual win condition of the game. Wrong answers don't just cost you the question — they hand the initiative back to your opponent, so every spin carries real weight once a couple of categories are already filled in.
Play the odds on categories you're weak in — a 25% guess on a subject you know nothing about is still better than skipping, since Trivia Crack doesn't punish wrong guesses any worse than a pass. Pay attention to which categories you've already completed; there's no point stressing over a spin that lands on a slice you've already secured. If you're playing against a friend rather than the computer, watch what they struggle with — steering later spins isn't possible, but knowing their weak categories tells you where the match will actually be decided. Keep a mental note of recurring question patterns within a category; trivia pools repeat more often than people expect over a long session.
If quick-fire knowledge testing is your thing, Trivia Crack sits comfortably next to Machita 66's other brain games — The Impossible Quiz takes the format somewhere much weirder and trickier, while Wordle Unlimited offers the same daily-habit appeal with a word-guessing twist instead of trivia. Browse the complete games library for more ways to test what you actually know.