Copilot has quietly become part of the Bing quiz experience, both as the engine behind the answer summaries and as a tool you can ask directly. This page explains how Copilot fits in and how to use it to answer quiz questions without overthinking it.

How Copilot connects to the quiz

When you search a quiz topic on Bing, the Copilot-style answer often pulls the key fact to the top with its sources attached. That summary is frequently all you need to confirm a multiple-choice answer, especially for clear factual questions.

Asking Copilot directly

You can also pose the question to Copilot in plain language. Give it the subject from the image caption and the exact detail you need, for example "how far do monarch butterflies migrate," and it'll answer with context you can sanity-check.

Keep your judgement switched on

Copilot is excellent on straightforward facts and shakier on fine distinctions. If a question hinges on "largest by area versus population" or a contested date, glance at the cited source before you trust the summary. It's a fast assistant, not an infallible one.

Better prompts, better answers

Specifics win. Name the place, person or species rather than asking "what is this," and ask for the one fact you're missing instead of a general overview. The tighter the question, the more useful the reply.