One of Bing's most playful quizzes matches legendary creatures to their homelands, Bigfoot and Friends drew enormous curiosity when it ran. It's folklore trivia: no creature here has scientific backing, and the questions are really geography in disguise.

Match the creature to the place

Bigfoot, also called Sasquatch, belongs to Pacific Northwest folklore in North America. The Yeti, the 'Abominable Snowman', haunts Himalayan legend. The Loch Ness Monster swims Scottish lore, and the chupacabra prowls stories across Latin America. Creature-to-region matching is the core question.

The famous 'evidence'

The best-known Loch Ness photo, 1934's 'surgeon's photograph', was later revealed as a hoax, a twist quizzes enjoy. Bigfoot's fame leans on the 1967 Patterson-Gimlin film, endlessly debated and never verified. Framing matters: these are legends, and the quiz treats them as cultural history.

The wider cast

Expect appearances from the kraken of Scandinavian sea lore, Australia's bunyip, and the Mothman of West Virginia legend. The study of hidden or rumoured creatures even has a name, cryptozoology, which itself shows up as an answer.

Answering approach

Anchor each legend to its region and its famous story. Because this is folklore, the 'correct' answers follow the popular legend, not biology, so the caption and common cultural knowledge are exactly the right sources.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is another name for Bigfoot?

Sasquatch, the legendary ape-like creature of Pacific Northwest folklore in North America.

Was the famous Loch Ness Monster photo real?

No, the celebrated 1934 'surgeon's photograph' was later revealed to be a hoax, a favourite quiz twist.

What is cryptozoology?

The study of legendary or rumoured creatures like Bigfoot and the Yeti, itself a common quiz answer.