| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Town whose nearby 1066 battleground saw William the Conqueror defeat Harold Godwinson | Hastings | 100%
|
| Welsh city whose football team was purchased by Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds | Wrexham | 95%
|
| English seaside resort town whose famous tower resembles the Eiffel Tower in Paris | Blackpool | 75%
|
| English border town that has changed from English and Scottish control many times throughout its history | Berwick-upon-Tweed | 65%
|
| Third largest city in Wales, it's US counterpart is an affluent part of Rhode Island | Newport | 65%
|
| Cornish town named in a Gilbert and Sullivan opera about pirates | Penzance | 65%
|
| Seaside town whose fair is the subject of a traditional folk song, most famously performed by Simon & Garfunkel | Scarborough | 60%
|
| Town in Tyne & Wear that is the ancestral home of the first U.S President | Washington | 60%
|
| Lancashire town whose football team was the butt of a milk advert joke: "Who are they?" | Accrington | 50%
|
| Northern Irish city that sounds like a Portuguese city | Lisburn | 50%
|
| Scottish city, location of the Wallace Monument dedicated one of the heroes of Scottish independence | Stirling | 50%
|
| Yorkshire town that was the destination of Dracula on his voyage to the UK | Whitby | 50%
|
| The only UK city to end in the Norse suffix -by (meaning village) | Derby | 45%
|
| Town in Kent that accidentally lost its city status, namesake of a city in New York | Rochester | 40%
|
| Capital of England prior to that battle | Winchester | 40%
|
| City that was the site of the UK's first Motorway (it isn't the M1) | Preston | 35%
|