Bing AI Search and Microsoft Copilot changed how a lot of people answer the homepage quiz, because instead of scanning ten blue links you can get a synthesised answer with the key fact up top. Used well, it's a fast way to confirm a quiz answer; used lazily, it can still get a nuanced question wrong. Here's how to lean on it sensibly.
Explore more: Bing Homepage Quiz Bing Search Quiz Bing Copilot Quiz Bing AI Search Tips
What it is
Bing AI Search blends traditional results with a Copilot-style answer that summarises across sources. Ask a question in plain language and you'll often get a direct answer plus the links it drew from, which is handy when a quiz question hinges on one specific fact.
Using it for quiz answers
Search the subject and the exact thing being asked, the same way you would normally, but read the summary and the cited sources rather than just the headline. For a question like "what is a group of flamingos called," the answer card usually surfaces "a flamboyance" straight away.
Where to be careful
AI answers are strong on clear facts and weaker on nuance. Questions that turn on "largest by area versus population" or "originally versus currently" still deserve a second look at an actual source. Treat the AI answer as a fast first opinion, not the final word on tricky wording.
Phrasing that gets better answers
Be specific. "Petra country location" beats "where is this place," and naming the subject from the image caption gives the model something concrete to work with. The clearer your question, the cleaner the answer.