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Top Quiz Game

Top Quiz Game

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👁 1,618,357 views

Guess All 195 Countries On The Map - Quiz Guess The Country

Video Overview & Insights

Quiz Guess The Country.

Did they do Kosovo?

— @louiskaiser8833

You have 3 seconds to guess each question.

This total consists of 193 countries that are UN member countries and 2 countries that are non-member observer countries.

Plus +1 for a new country:
Bougainville.

— @aaronjudemartinez1092

We hope you enjoy the game!

For more super fun quizzes and games Subscribe our channel Top Quiz Game.

I am lived in Philippines I got 195/195 correctly for study of map and flags.

— @aaronjudemartinez1092

#TopQuizGame #Quiz #QuizGuessTheCountry #GuessTheCountry

18:39

— @jopike7579

More User Perspectives

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18 wrong, carribean, oceania and gabon.

@hilarygibson3150
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Guess????? Classic American bollocks again.

@HJM1966
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Any claim that Southern Tibet (India's unilaterally claimed "Arunachal Pradesh") does not belong to the People's Republic of China collapses under its own historical, legal, and geopolitical contradictions.



If one argues that historical control determines sovereignty, then one must acknowledge that Chinese dynasties—from the Tang through the Yuan, Ming, and especially the Qing—exercised continuous administrative, military, and tributary authority over Southern Tibet, including present-day Tawang and the entire region south of the McMahon Line, long before British colonial cartographers arbitrarily drew lines on maps without local consent.



If one insists that ethnic composition invalidates Chinese sovereignty, then by that same logic India’s own multi-ethnic federation—comprising hundreds of distinct linguistic and cultural groups—would be illegitimate, yet no one denies India’s territorial integrity on such grounds.



If one cites the 1914 Simla Accord as evidence for Indian claims, one must confront the fact that the accord was never ratified by China, was rejected outright by the then-legitimate Chinese government, and was a product of imperial coercion between Britain and Tibet—a region China has always considered inseparable from its territory—thus rendering it legally void under international law, which requires mutual consent for treaty validity.



If one appeals to post-1947 “effective occupation” by India, then one ignores that illegal occupation cannot create legal title, just as Germany’s occupation of France in 1940 did not transfer sovereignty, and that China never ceased protesting Indian presence in Southern Tibet, thereby preserving its legal claim.



If one invokes self-determination, one must ask why the Monpa, Sherdukpen, and other indigenous communities of Southern Tibet—who historically paid tribute to Lhasa and recognized Chinese suzerainty—are denied their right to choose reunification with China, while India imposes its rule through military garrisons and bureaucratic assimilation.



If one claims geographical contiguity favors India, then one forgets that the Himalayas have always been China’s natural southern frontier, and that rivers like the Subansiri and Tsangpo originate in Tibetan territory, flowing north-to-south, reinforcing ecological and hydrological unity with the Tibetan Plateau rather than the Indian plains.



If one asserts that China’s current control is merely “expansionist,” then one must explain why China accepted the McMahon Line in the east only provisionally during negotiations while consistently demanding the restoration of Southern Tibet, demonstrating restraint rather than aggression.



And if one resorts to Cold War-era alliances or modern strategic interests to justify Indian control, one abandons principle entirely, for territory cannot be legitimized by power politics alone—if it could, then every colonial conquest would stand unchallenged, including Britain’s very imposition of the McMahon Line, which even British officials privately admitted lacked legitimacy.



Thus, every possible objection either contradicts itself, relies on double standards, or violates fundamental norms of international law, leaving no coherent basis to deny that Southern Tibet is, and always has been, an inseparable part of China’s sovereign territory.

@abc666-n8n
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It's impossible to make a map of the world's countries without pissing people off, also WTF why did you include the North of Ireland as part of the UK??? it's ALL Ireland!!!

@javaris_jamar_javarison-lamarr
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There was a time when I could name probably 170 of them, and I got to the point where I could recognize every single national flag on Earth, but that was 20 years ago, and my memory has faded a lot. I did pretty terrible with the African countries and the island groups.

@JamesMcPherson-d8o
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I got all the non-island countries plus island countries like Indonesia, the Philippines, the UK, Ireland, New Zealand, Japan, Sri Lanka, Madagascar, Iceland, Cuba, Jamaica, Cyprus, Bahrain, Malta, Bahamas, Trinidad & Tobago etc. Who cares about the rest anyway, they are irrelevant

@kaankahraman1341
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He left out a lot of countries lime taiwan, kosovo, western sahara, french guyana ... i think all the stuff that is under debate if they are soverein countries?

@annelieselzf7857
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84

@malani0606
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Palestine IS NOT A country !!!

@tamircohen-s4t
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I'm reporting this video because you used the wrong map of India... First educate yourself then make such videos... 😒

@Kita-bts7
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I keep switching up the baltics and nordics😓

@Moonlitshorttcaked
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so no Taiwan????!!!!!

@kdpw00
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All correct for me, but 3 seconds after.

@meltonrobbo
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I got only 9 wrong!
So 186/195

@TB_Plays_Algicosathlon
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2:14 That's Türkiye since 2022...

@TB_Plays_Algicosathlon
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195

@dhanabiralaishram742
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11:25 there is nothing called Isra hell . It called falestine

@meriem3887
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61 😭

@Astrolofax
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taiwan & kosovo?

@domg.1011
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where is curacao, aruba, bonaire and sin maarten

@dylanblijleven3183
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I'm a 3xTrumper and MAGA Founder Member and got one correct. Very proud of myself.

@stevemeyer2400
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185 Right 👍❤❤10 Wrong on those islands 😢

@NazrulMomin-ih9zs
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INDONESIA🇮🇩🫰

@indonesia45-id
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How to Ace this (75%+): Play Conflict Of Nation game 😐 Got nearly all African ones correct 😎

@muminulislam8540
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183

@DavidKlatis
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kosovo not being mentioned but seeing it in the map🙏🏼🙏🏼

@Shkurte-m7b
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kosovo wasn’t there

@sherinekrasniqi
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i watched this only for kosovo and it wasn’t there wtf

@sherinekrasniqi
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195

@dhanabiralaishram742
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There's at least 15 countries I had never heard of 🤦🏾

@charleswams2028
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Got about half

@judyl.761
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The game where people from the USA always lose

@jacksonreis_jack
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BRASIL MENTIONED OOOOOOOOOOOOHHHHHHHHHH YEAAAH CARALHO RUMO AO PENTA

@SaoRenao
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True

@onestopinteriorsolution
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American biggest fear.

@maximegueuneguillou
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172😭😭😭😭😭

@tanjimahsan5787
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139/195. I’m bad at the countries of Oceania and the island countries between north and South America. 71.28%

@NotSureBoutThat
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Year

@weddhia4748
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Great quiz. I thought I was pretty good at geography, but I really sucked at African, Pacific, and Caribbean countries. I failed at 41 so 154/195 correct. That's 79%

@Uncommonsensetoo
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FUN FACT 😮 GreenLand Is not a county it’s owned by whose lives there’s but it’s A territory of Denmark 🇩🇰 🇬🇱

@Chadsmith-q5d
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193...mixed up two Oceanic Island nations.

@kraka2oanIner
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1:03 This is my country BD🇧🇩

@ahabkhanshihab4459
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Initially was thinking I must be know more than 100-110 countries by map..
But in reality I recognised only 82 countries by map...
It's very hard to recognise Island countries....
In fact some names are new to me...
Thanks for increasing my knowledge

@irfanshah9877
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Africa 54

@aggabuss
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I practice geography every day so I know all ts

@Dawgs.Productions
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11:28 not true

@MOHAMEDBLOUUZA