Frequently asked questions
Everything you need to know about Sports Trivia — the free football quiz game built for World Cup 2026. Can't find your answer? Start with how to play or browse the trivia categories.
What is Sports Trivia?
Sports Trivia is a free online football (soccer) quiz game built for the FIFA World Cup 2026. It has 500+ questions across 10 categories and four modes — Solo Rush, Daily Quest, live Multiplayer and Bracket predictions — and runs in any browser at sportstrivia.app.
Is Sports Trivia free to play?
Yes. Every mode is completely free — there is no payment, subscription or paywall, and you can play without creating an account by jumping in as a guest.
Can I play without creating an account?
Yes. Tap “Play as guest” on the Solo Rush page to start instantly. Your progress is saved to your device, and you can turn your guest profile into a permanent account at any time without losing it.
How do I sign up?
Pick a username, enter your email and choose a password — that's it. There's no email verification step, so you can start playing straight away. Usernames are unique, and you log in with just your username and password.
What game modes are available?
Four: Solo Rush (rapid-fire, 3 lives, chase a high score), Daily Quest (10 new questions a day, one attempt, keeps your streak), live Multiplayer (race friends on the same question in real time) and Bracket (predict every World Cup 2026 knockout result).
How does scoring work?
A correct answer scores 100–200 points depending on difficulty (Bronze ×1.0, Silver ×1.5, Gold ×2.0), plus a speed bonus of up to 50% for answering quickly within the 15-second timer.
What topics do the questions cover?
Ten categories: World Cup 2026, World Cup History, Players & Transfers, Clubs & Stadiums, Rules & Tactics, Euro Championship, Copa América, Iconic Matches, Top 5 Leagues and Champions League — across Bronze, Silver and Gold difficulty.
When and where is the 2026 World Cup?
The FIFA World Cup 2026 runs from June to July 2026 across the United States, Canada and Mexico — the first three-nation World Cup. It expands to 48 teams playing 104 matches, with the final at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.