Easy Internet Trivia
Question: In what year was the first video game mag Electronic Games launched?
Answer: 1981
Question: AltaVista was an early version of what online superpower?
Answer: Search Engine
Question: What does 'WWW' really stand for (nope, not wrestling)?
Answer: World Wide Web
Question: If someone types 'gtg', what are they about to do—poof?
Answer: Leave
Question: How many zeroes are in a googol—Google’s name twin?
Answer: 1 followed by 100 zeroes
Question: The Firefox logo shows a fox wrapped around what?
Answer: Globe
Question: When did AOL first hit the digital scene—hello dial-up!
Answer: 1983
Question: Before AOL became cool, what was it called?
Answer: America Online
Question: Which tech lets you safely swipe your card online?
Answer: SSL
Question: What’s Google’s not-so-evil slogan?
Answer: Don’t Be Evil
Question: When did HDTV first wow our eyeballs?
Answer: 1989
Question: Finish this dance craze: The Harlem ___.
Answer: Shake
Question: What was the OG instant messaging app—before DMs ruled?
Answer: ICQ
Question: Which British town gave us Bond (aka Daniel Craig)?
Answer: Chester
Question: How big does Google say the internet is—yep, that big?
Answer: 5 Million Terabytes
Question: What does RSS stand for (hint: not robot sandwich system)?
Answer: Real Simple Syndication
Question: How many blogs are floating out there in cyberspace?
Answer: 250 Million
Question: Finish the meme-famous feline: ____ Cat.
Answer: Grumpy
Question: What do you call surprise ads that hijack your screen?
Answer: Pop-Ups
Question: What does 'LOL' stand for (not “lots of lasagna”)?
Answer: Laughing Out Loud
Question: How many humans are still scrolling through Facebook?
Answer: 1.1 Billion
Question: Last.fm helps you discover what kind of content?
Answer: Music
Question: What % of emails are spam (aka junk jungle)?
Answer: 81%
Question: What’s the internet extension for Egypt?
Answer: .eg
Question: What color is the ‘F’ in Facebook’s logo?
Answer: White
Question: What does RSS mean online (again, not sandwich related)?
Answer: Really Simple Syndication
Question: ‘NVM’ is short for what brush-it-off phrase?
Answer: Never Mind
Question: How do the Japanese do smileys—kawaii style?
Answer: ^^
Question: Which animal famously jammed out on a keyboard?
Answer: Cat
Question: Google, Yahoo, and Bing are all what?
Answer: Search Engines
Question: Where do Skyrim guards keep taking arrows?
Answer: The Knee
Question: When did GeoCities vanish from the US web?
Answer: 2009
Question: GeoCities still lives on in which country?
Answer: Japan
Question: Where did Resident Evil (1996) unfold—creepy and iconic?
Answer: Mansion
Question: What’s the tweet-length limit on Twitter/X?
Answer: 280
Question: Which face means surprised—basically "Whaaa?"
Answer: :-O
Question: Which cold country had sky-high internet use in 2013?
Answer: Iceland
Question: Which two states first connected on the Internet?
Answer: Massachusetts/California
Question: In ROFL, what does the ‘F’ mean?
Answer: Floor
Question: What did Amazon sell before it sold everything?
Answer: Books
Question: Who tweeted the most retweeted tweet in 2013?
Answer: Barack Obama
Question: Finish the old-school search site: Ask ____.
Answer: Jeeves
Medium Internet Trivia
Question: The 'Nyan Cat' zooms through space with the body of which breakfast pastry?
Answer: Pop Tart
Question: In ‘URL’, what does the elusive ‘L’ actually stand for? (Hint: It’s not ‘Lettuce’)
Answer: Locater
Question: Which photo-sharing app makes your brunch look 10x cooler with filters?
Answer: Instagram
Question: Which platform was the OG of web-only email, back when dial-up ruled?
Answer: Hotmail
Question: Tumblr: Where all your edgy teen blog dreams came true. What’s it for?
Answer: Blogging
Question: What do we call the digital sticky note that helps you find that awesome cat video again?
Answer: Bookmark
Question: When did Frogger first leap into arcades and our hearts?
Answer: 1981
Question: What’s China’s go-to search engine—because Google’s not always invited to the party?
Answer: Baidu
Question: Which site gets more visits than your grandma’s fridge door?
Answer: Facebook
Question: What do you call a sneaky email pretending to be your bank but is really a trap?
Answer: Phishing
Question: Which country has 20–30% of its population online—aka the slow internet party?
Answer: Cuba
Question: Which site lets you play addictive casual games when you should be working?
Answer: Miniclip
Question: People who stir chaos in forums for fun are lovingly (?) known as what?
Answer: Trolls
Question: Spam over the phone isn’t tasty—it’s called what?
Answer: Spit
Question: Which of these didn’t make Ms. Pac-Man different from her pellet-chomping hubby?
Answer: Dress
Question: Which meme represents the forever-alone friend group we all secretly have?
Answer: Forever Alone
Question: What’s the badass job of Lara Croft, who raids tombs and pixels?
Answer: Archaeologist
Question: Before scrolling was a habit, what term did people use for going online?
Answer: Surfing the Net
Question: LinkedIn is like Facebook in a business suit. Who’s it really for?
Answer: Professionals
Question: Julia Roberts confessed she’s hooked on which soap opera? (Bet you didn’t see this one coming.)
Answer: Days of our Lives
Question: The first-ever website still exists. What timeless knowledge does it offer?
Answer: Help for web users
Question: What’s an intranet? (Think Internet… with trust issues.)
Answer: Internal Internet
Question: Which quirky Super Mario sequel from the '90s felt like a total fever dream?
Answer: Super Mario 2
Question: Before he had his own name, Mario debuted in which arcade classic?
Answer: Donkey Kong
Question: Which 80s arcade game gave us Valkyries, Wizards, and the fear of hearing “Wizard needs food badly”?
Answer: Gauntlet
Question: Remember Orkut? It’s still poppin’ in which social media-loving country?
Answer: Brazil
Question: People who silently read forums but never comment are called what? (We see you.)
Answer: Lurker
Question: Which ‘80s singer keeps showing up uninvited as a pop-up?
Answer: Rick Astley
Question: Which site is like a virtual garage sale (but with way more weird stuff)?
Answer: Craigslist
Question: Which country has 80–90% of its people happily scrolling online?
Answer: France
Question: Which song by Rebecca Black became an internet earworm sensation?
Answer: Friday
Question: What did Pac-Man spend his arcade days running away from?
Answer: Ghosts
Question: Which site’s logo is mostly blue… except for a pink surprise at the end?
Answer: Flickr
Question: What’s the geeky name for a waiting line in computer-speak?
Answer: Queue
Question: What color is the hungriest dot in gaming?
Answer: Yellow
Question: What do we call the digital bouncer that blocks out bad stuff from entering your system?
Answer: Firewall
Question: Who’s meme-famous for being way too into her boyfriend?
Answer: Girlfriend
Question: Google, Yahoo, and Bing aren’t friends—they’re rival what?
Answer: Search Engines
Question: As of 2013, which teen popstar was Twitter royalty?
Answer: Justin Bieber
Question: What percent of the US was online as of 2013? (Spoiler: A lot.)
Answer: 81%
Question: What year did Facebook officially become the cool kids’ hangout?
Answer: 2004
Question: In what year did soul legend Marvin Gaye pass away?
Answer: 1984
Question: What’s another name for those sneaky programs that spy on your clicks?
Answer: Bot
Question: How much did the original PlayStation cost? (Cue dramatic music)
Answer: $299
Question: Finish the viral game: “6 Degrees of ____.” (Hint: Think footloose.)
Answer: Kevin Bacon
Question: Canada’s digital calling card is which internet extension?
Answer: .ca
Question: Finish the title of this shrill but viral internet series: “Annoying ____.”
Answer: Orange
Question: What year did the first blog come to life? (Before influencers ruled the web.)
Answer: 1997
Question: Which site has a rainbow-colored logo and a bidding war?
Answer: eBay
Question: Which of these is not a Jack Johnson song? (Sorry, winter lovers.)
Answer: Winter
Question: What do online gamers call that one clueless teammate?
Answer: Newbie
Question: When did Skype first let us video chat with bad lighting?
Answer: 2003
Question: Which color is missing from the Google Chrome logo?
Answer: Purple
Question: What year did businesses get the green light to go online and sell stuff?
Answer: 1992
Question: The CD-ROM made its shiny debut in what year? (Yes, we’re ancient.)
Answer: 1984
Question: When did we say goodbye to Windows Live Messenger?
Answer: 2013
Question: Which site is the MVP for sending and receiving money online?
Answer: PayPal
Question: The video game Tekken belongs to which punch-happy genre?
Answer: Fighting
Question: The ‘E’ in email doesn’t stand for ‘Exciting’—what does it stand for?
Answer: Electronic
Question: What do you call a digital band-aid that fixes a program bug?
Answer: A Patch
Question: Crash Bandicoot (1996) spun into our lives in which game genre?
Answer: Platform
Question: What do we call digital hangouts where people typed before DMs existed?
Answer: Chat Rooms
Question: The World Wide Web was invented by a genius from which country?
Answer: Britain
Question: Which site is really excited—so much so, it ends with an exclamation point?
Answer: Yahoo!
Question: What old-school site let users build glittery web pages before it went offline?
Answer: GeoCities
Question: Liam Kyle Sullivan’s shoe-obsessed alter ego is known as what?
Answer: Kelly
Question: What do we call software that’s free but still awesome?
Answer: Freeware
Question: The first search engine didn’t have a funky name—it was called what?
Answer: Archie
Question: What’s the name of that screechy modem sound from the early Internet days?
Answer: Handshake
Question: What is the UK's homegrown web extension?
Answer: .co.uk
Question: When did Queen Elizabeth II casually become the first royal emailer?
Answer: 1976
Question: What’s the internet extension used by educational institutions in the US?
Answer: .edu
Question: Which of these virus types sounds more like a garden pest than a threat?
Answer: Worm
Question: What year did eBay launch and turn junk into treasure?
Answer: 1995
Question: Which country keeps Facebook on a very short leash (aka, it's banned)?
Answer: China
Question: Which early network walked so the modern internet could run?
Answer: Arpanet
Question: Which of these is not an ISP in the US? (But sounds magical.)
Answer: Wizard
Question: What do we call a funny image that spreads faster than gossip?
Answer: Meme
Question: When did the blocky legend Tetris first make our brains hurt—in a good way?
Answer: 1984
Question: What nationality was Tetris’ mastermind? (Spoiler: Not American.)
Answer: Russian
Question: What’s the name of Google’s speedy, colorful web browser?
Answer: Chrome
Question: Besides Firefox, Mozilla experimented with which sea-themed browser?
Answer: SeaMonkey
Question: Clickable magic portals in docs or sites are called what?
Answer: Hyper
Hard Internet Trivia
Question: What’s the #1 thing people do on YouTube—besides 2am rabbit holes?
Answer: Watch Videos
Question: ‘IRC’ sounds robotic—but what’s it really short for?
Answer: Internet Relay Chat
Question: Which Microsoft browser is both iconic... and meme material?
Answer: Internet Explorer
Question: What gobbled up arcades in 1980—no quarters spared?
Answer: An Arcade Game
Question: Which email app rules phones (and your inbox)?
Answer: iOS Devices
Question: Which internet connection is so fast, it feels like cheating?
Answer: Fiber Optic
Question: Who’s the stressed redhead genius in Homeland?
Answer: Damien Lewis
Question: Which soap star's been in Days of Our Lives since dinosaurs?
Answer: Susan Seaforth Hayes
Question: Which of these consoles never existed—though it totally should?
Answer: PlayGo 2100
Question: Before Chrome, what browser let us surf like 90s cool kids?
Answer: Netscape Navigator
Question: Which creepy cartoon made early internet kids go “what was that?”
Answer: Salad Fingers
Question: What do you call a magazine that’s 100% tree-free?
Answer: A Virtual Magazine
Question: Who sent the very first email—no spam, just history?
Answer: Ray Tomlinson
Question: Which computer virus is named after a sneaky myth creature?
Answer: Trojan Horse
Question: Who tickled Elmo’s voice for nearly 30 years?
Answer: Kevin Clash
Question: Which 1982 racing game made kids feel like F1 champs?
Answer: Pole Position
Question: Which viral “game” was really just a jump scare trap?
Answer: Scary Maze Game
Question: What’s Link’s mission in Ocarina of Time—classic fairytale stuff?
Answer: Save The Princess
Question: Which 2012 YouTube hit had the world dancing like lunatics?
Answer: Gangnam Style
Question: What video site isn’t YouTube, but still around?
Answer: Dailymotion
Question: What’s the superhero squad fixing software bugs called?
Answer: Service Pack
Question: What nickname do we give badass internet-savvy grandparents?
Answer: Silver Surfers
Question: Who created the Web—and didn’t even ask for a subscription?
Answer: Tim Berners-Lee
Question: Who made Facebook so sticky, you forgot MySpace existed?
Answer: Mark Zuckerberg
Question: Which pope was the first to send an email?
Answer: John Paul II
Question: Which of these Facebook features doesn’t exist (yet)?
Answer: External Email Checker
Question: What does DNS actually stand for (no, not “Do Not Search”)?
Answer: Domain Name Server
Question: Which sitcom is geeky, glitchy, and very British?
Answer: The IT Crowd
Question: Which sitcom turned a WWII POW camp into a comedy?
Answer: Hogan’s Heroes