| Population | Continent | Hint | Answer | % Correct | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | 2.7 million | North America | famous for its Deep Dish pizza and its Great Fire of 1871 | Chicago | 100%
|
| D | 1.3 million | North America | site of the JFK assassination in 1963 | Dallas | 100%
|
| E | 1 million | North America | home to North America’s largest shopping mall - northernmost major city on the continent | Edmonton | 98%
|
| L | 9.1 million | Europe | ancient Roman settlement home to Big Ben | London | 98%
|
| N | 8.8 million | North America | houses the headquarters of the United Nations and the iconic Statue of Liberty | New York City | 98%
|
| S | 5.1 million | Oceania | famous for its sails-shaped Opera House and the massive Harbour Bridge | Sydney | 98%
|
| A | 1.5 million | Oceania | “City of Sails” boasting more boats per capita than anywhere else in the world | Auckland | 96%
|
| B | 2.7 million | Oceania | 2032 Summer Olympics host | Brisbane | 96%
|
| M | 5.2 million | Oceania | frequently cited as the “Coffee Capital of the World” | Melbourne | 96%
|
| P | 2.3 million | Oceania | one of the most isolated geographic cities in the world | Perth | 96%
|
| H | 2.4 million | North America | “Space City” home to the NASA Mission Control Center and the world's largest medical complex | Houston | 93%
|
| I | 891,000 | North America | home to the world’s largest single-day sporting event: the Indy 500 | Indianapolis | 91%
|
| T | 2.8 million | North America | financial hub defined by the CN Tower and its status as one of the most multicultural cities on Earth | Toronto | 91%
|
| O | 1 million | North America | famous for the Rideau Canal (the world’s largest skating rink in winter) and its annual Tulip Festival | Ottawa | 78%
|
| G | 681,000 | Oceania | tourist hotspot famous for its "Surfers Paradise" beach and theme parks | Gold Coast | 76%
|
| J | 1 million | North America | largest city by land area in the contiguous United States and a major deep-water naval port | Jacksonville | 73%
|
| K | 516,000 | North America | renowned for its unique style of barbecue and its many historic fountains | Kansas City | 73%
|
| V | 662,000 | North America | called "Hollywood North" due to its massive film industry, where the mountains meet the Pacific Ocean | Vancouver | 71%
|
| R | 500,000 | North America | “City of Oaks” major hub for tech and biotech in the “Research Triangle” region | Raleigh | 69%
|
| W | 750,000 | North America | namesake of the bear that inspired Winnie-the-Pooh | Winnipeg | 64%
|
| F | 1 million | North America | “Cowtown” famous for its historic Stockyards and its deep roots in the American cattle trade | Fort Worth | 56%
|
| Q | 102,000 | North America | birthplace of both John Adams and John Quincy Adams | Quincy, Massachusetts | 53%
|
| Y | 212,000 | North America | "Terrace City" where Elisha Otis invented the safety elevator | Yonkers | 29%
|
| X | 25,000 | North America | "Bicycle Capital of the Midwest” gained national fame for surviving a massive F5 tornado in 1974 | Xenia, Ohio | 27%
|
| Z | 31,000 | North America | Indiana suburb famous for its preserved brick-paved Main Street, one of few left in the US | Zionsville, Indiana | 22%
|
| U | 86,000 | North America | home to the famous Tower Theater and the birthplace of comedian Tina Fey | Upper Darby, Pennsylvania | 4%
|