These are all taken from real Monopoly boards, either the standard local edition of a country or editions that have been made for international sale representing a particular country. (And later in the series some local unofficial versions where official ones have not been made yet.) Sometimes they focus on a specific city, and sometimes the country as a whole. Text not in the Latin alphabet has been translated where necessary.
The point is for it to be untimed, so you can cycle through the answers and make your decisions. I leave it long on click quizzes where time isn't intended to be a factor because you can only click once anyway. It's not like a text quiz where you can try multiple different answers.
I also thought the amount of time seemed rather generous, as I finished it in 1:20. Though I am admittedly a huge nerd when it comes to both languages *and* geography, so even the ones where the language could apply to multiple countries, the specific locations still quickly gave me the answer. But your logic about the timer being less relevant for a click quiz as opposed to a typed-answer quiz makes sense.
What a terrific quiz. That said, the last time I played Monopoly, I had all the green properties and all the dark blue properties, with hotels, and still lost. I'm having flashbacks.
Can remember the last time I played Monopoly. I do know that I sent the board flying in a fit of pique (I was probably about seven at the time). This is a very clever quiz, and I thoroughly enjoyed it....
fun fact: most of the names for the Italian version were actual Road/Square names in the city of Milan in the 1930s (when the localization was created).
What's fascinating to me is that those names were never updated in the game even if some of those roads actually changed name in real life.
It's fun how instead of train stations, some countries have airports, Turkey has ports, Switzerland has cable cars, and Singapore... wth does Singapore has?
What amount of time would you prefer it to be?
Got 18
fun fact: most of the names for the Italian version were actual Road/Square names in the city of Milan in the 1930s (when the localization was created).
What's fascinating to me is that those names were never updated in the game even if some of those roads actually changed name in real life.