| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| One-eyed general who rebelled after the death of Alexander, founding his own dynasty in Anatolia; killed during the Battle of Ipsus against the combined forces of #4, #7, #8, and #10 | Antigonus I Monophthalmus | 90%
|
| The bodyguard, general, and childhood friend of Alexander who founded a dynasty in Egypt; he is the ancestor of the famous Cleopatra VII; died of natural causes | Ptolemy I Soter | 90%
|
| Officer who mutinied against #1 and founded his own dynasty spanning the majority of the fallen Persian Empire's territory; assassinated by the son of #7 | Seleucus I Nicator | 80%
|
| Son of the above who succeeded his father; known as "the Besieger;" the Colossus of Rhodes was constructed in celebration of a failed siege of his; reclaimed Macedonia by killing the son of #4 | Demetrius I Poliorcetes | 70%
|
| The accountant-turned-general of Alexander who remained loyal to the Argead dynasty; killed Neoptolemus in single combat at the Battle of the Hellespont; died in captivity after being captured by #5 | Eumenes of Cardia | 70%
|
| Advisor of both Philip II and Alexander; he stayed behind to govern Macedonia during the campaigns against Persia, founding his own dynasty after the death of Alexander | Antipater | 60%
|
| Son of the above who was accused of poisoning Alexander; went on to found the Greek city Thessaloniki; directly or indirectly responsible for the deaths of most of Alexander's family | Cassander | 60%
|
| Bodyguard and general of Alexander who founded his own kingdom in Thrace; killed in the Battle of Corupedium against #10 | Lysimachus | 60%
|
| The bodyguard and general of Alexander who inherited his signet ring; his efforts to consolidate the empire under a single ruler ended in failure and his assassination | Perdiccas | 60%
|
| General of Alexander's army who was supposed to replace #3 as regent of Macedonia; killed in The Battle of the Hellespont against #9 | Craterus | 50%
|