| Hint | City | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| The capital of Country | Warsaw | 100%
|
| The most famous historical ancient capital of the Kingdom of Poland. | Kraków | 92%
|
| The refusal to surrender this city was the pretext and spark for World War II. | Gdańsk | 81%
|
| One of the historical ancient capitals of the Greater Poland region and its current capital. | Poznań | 75%
|
| Known for its most infamous Jewish concentration camp. | Oświęcim | 72%
|
| The center of the largest metropolitan area in the European Union by population. | Katowice | 69%
|
| The university city's namesake university has produced 9 Nobel Prize winners. | Wrocław | 67%
|
| The most important historical port in the Pomerania region. | Szczecin | 64%
|
| This city, thriving due to the textile industry, experienced a collapse in the 1990s. | Łódź | 61%
|
| A trade center with Belarus, referred to by Lukashenko as "belonging to Belarus." | Białystok | 53%
|
| From the end of the 16th century to the end of the 18th century, this city was the location of the royal court and a center of culture and higher education. | Lublin | 44%
|
| Its name in Polish means “green mountain”. | Zielona Góra | 44%
|
| Sharing the capital of the same province with the above city, it is the larger of the two, and NATO headquarters in Poland are located here. | Bydgoszcz | 42%
|
| The capital of Świętokrzyskie Province, where a massacre of Jews still occurred in 1946. | Kielce | 42%
|
| This World Heritage ancient city is the birthplace of Copernicus. | Toruń | 42%
|
| The most famous resort town at the foot of the Tatra Mountains, known as "the winter capital of Poland." | Zakopane | 42%
|
| This city was formed by the merger of two cities, both of whose names deriving from 'white'(biała) in Polish. | Bielsko-Biała | 39%
|
| The largest city in southeastern Poland, whose population has increased by 50% due to Ukrainian refugees. | Rzeszów | 39%
|
| The city is a shrine to the Virgin Mary and known for Black Madonna painting, | Częstochowa | 36%
|
| The more important "other end" of the Tri-City. | Gdynia | 36%
|
| This city was the center of the Mazovia region before Warsaw and considered one of Poland's former capitals. | Płock | 33%
|
| The first historical capital of Poland | Gniezno | 31%
|
| The largest city in the Warmia region, where Copernicus personally commanded the defense during conflicts with the Teutonic Knights. | Olsztyn | 31%
|
| The historical capital of Upper Silesia, replaced only after World War II. | Opole | 28%
|
| The second oldest city in southeastern Poland, where the bloodiest siege battle between Russia and Austria-Hungary occurred during World War I. | Przemyśl | 22%
|