Help desk

Frequently asked questions

Everything about how the site works — schedules, scoring, corrections and policies. Page-specific questions live on each quiz page; these are the site-wide ones.

Frequently asked questions

Is this site affiliated with Microsoft or Bing?

No. This is an independent fan-made trivia site. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, or connected to Microsoft Corporation in any way. 'Bing' is Microsoft's trademark.

Are your questions the same as the ones on Bing's homepage?

No — all questions here are original, written by our editors. We cover the same broad entertainment themes, but the questions, wording and answer keys are our own.

How often is new content published?

One new daily edition every day at 00:05 UTC, with its answers page published simultaneously. Themed pages update when facts change.

Do I need an account?

No accounts, no sign-ups, no scoreboards. Everything runs in your browser.

Does the quiz work without JavaScript?

The interactive picker needs JavaScript, but every edition's questions and answers are also present as plain text on its answers section, so the content is fully readable without it.

How do you fact-check questions?

Each fact is verified against a primary or reputable secondary source before publication, and explanations name the type of source relied on. The editorial policy page describes the full workflow, including corrections.

How do I report a wrong answer?

Use the contact page and mention the edition date and question number. Confirmed corrections are published with a dated note on the affected page.

Can I reuse your questions?

Personal use — pub quizzes, classrooms — is fine with attribution. Republishing pages or feeds commercially isn't permitted; see the terms of use.

Is the site accessible?

The quiz is fully keyboard-operable, feedback is announced to screen readers via live regions, colour contrast meets WCAG AA, and reduced-motion preferences are respected.

Why do some records in old editions look out of date?

Archived editions are historical documents. Rather than rewriting them when a record falls, we add a dated correction note — the original page stays as it ran.