Geography is the Bing quiz's bread and butter, because the homepage photo is so often a landscape, a landmark, or a city. If you can name what's in the picture, you can usually answer a country or geography question without breaking a sweat. Here's how to read these and where people slip up.
Explore more: Bing Homepage Quiz Bing Geography Quiz Bing Homepage Quiz Category Bing Daily Quiz
The questions you'll actually see
Expect "which country is this in," "what is the capital of," "which landmark is shown," and the occasional flag or river. The phrasing matters: "which country is this tradition from" is a different question from "which country is this photo taken in," even when the image is the same.
Let the caption do the work
The image caption frequently names the exact place. If it says "Plitvice Lakes National Park, Croatia," and the question asks where Plitvice is, that's the answer handed to you. When the caption only hints, search the landmark name plus "location" and check a reputable source like a tourism board or encyclopedia entry.
Watch the look-alike answers
Geography questions love close distractors: neighbouring countries, cities that sound similar, or two famous falls on different continents. If two options feel plausible, slow down and match them against the precise wording. A question about where a species is "found" may mean its natural habitat, not the country in the photo.
A couple of worked examples
If the image shows the ancient city of Petra and the question asks the country, that's Jordan. If it shows the Dolomites and asks the mountain range or country, that's the Alps and Italy. Spotting the subject first turns most of these into one quick confirmation search.