The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Barroom trivia slayer? Get your quiz on digitally

Online games can quench your thirst for competitio­n.

- Alexis Soloski

In the spring, just before lockdown hit North Carolina, Steve Bahnaman met some friends at a Cider Brewery, j ust outside Raleigh, for an evening of bar trivia. His team, COVID Operations ( this was back before COVID19 puns were “super tired,” he explained), won the competitio­n that night. The prize: $ 40 in bar cash. “Which I’m probably never going to use,” said Bahnaman, who hasn’t visited a bar or played another game in person since. “That is very sad.”

Lockdowns have shut some bars, while reducing capacit y at others. Though this has had a withering effect on in- person bar t rivi a, i t has al so encouraged a proliferat­ion of online games. Now you can test your knowledge of Epi s c opal s ee s or TV catchphras­es from anywhere at any time, competing against other humans or j ust your own recall.

Bar trivia began in England in the 1970s. Designed to bring people inside to order drinks on slow nights, the competitio­ns quickly gained popularity, providing both an economic bump for small businesses and a social occasion for bar patrons. In most quizzes, a host asks a series of questions — general, themed, audio or visual — and teams of patrons scribble answers as they down pints.

A good trivia question has an interestin­g fact at its heart, something you might want to know if you don’t already. And it presents the query not in a “you know it or you don’t” way, but rather in a form that generates discussion and allows you to deduce your way to an educated guess. ( One example: What is the only state in

which both the name of the state and the name of the state capital have been one- word titles of Oscar nominees for best picture?) Prizes i nclude cash, a cleared bar tab or simply the warm glow that comes from really nailing that multipart hockey mascot braintease­r.

Having proliferat­ed on Zoom, Twitch and Facebook Live, quizzes look and feel different now, of course. While a few enable remote s ociali zi ng — vi a chat functions or breakout room — you s t i l l c an’t share j al apeño poppers or hunch around the same worksheet. But that’s the price paid for not having to share a table ( and aerosols) with people outside your household as you try to recall China’s major rivers. Asynchrono­us quizzes, available daily, weekly or whenever, are enjoying a rush of pop

ularity, too. Some still offer cash pri zes, but many f unc t i on as fundraiser­s for struggling bars, food banks or the quiz companies themselves.

David Gallic, the director of content at King Trivia, which had games at 1 90 bars across the West Coast and the Southwest before the coronaviru­s intervened, misses the personal interactio­n of bar trivia. “On Twitch, when I’m hosting, it’s me on camera, and everybody else in a little chat box,” he said. But he enjoys the multi- time- zone reach that an online format provides. Lynn Yu, a co- founder of Trivia LA, which generates monthly trivia question lists and offers private livestream games for a fee, likes that she doesn’t have to dress up. “They’re only seeing the top half of me,” she said.

O’brien’s, a pub in Santa Monica, California, that hosts a weekly quiz thronged with “Jeopardy!” champs, held its last quiz March 11. The following Wednesday the quiz reappeared online and hasn’t missed a week since. “This is a way that maybe gets us to 90% of the feeling of being there live with people with basically zero percent of the risk,” said Dave Shukan, an occasional O’brien’s writer and host.

Once a month, its rotating hosts present what they call a “Frankenqui­z,” a best- of edition designed for a popular ( if scarily knowledgea­ble) audience. On a recent Sunday, 17 teams handily fielded questions about film directors, sports teams, I badi Islam and a British foreign secretary, anagrammed. “It’s not a question of being smart,” said Paul Paquet, a longtime player and trivia columnist. “I t’s j ust a neurologic­al quirk where we remember things.” Debatable.

Newcomers to trivia, even those with decent general knowledge and a trove of weirder info lodged somewhere in the hippocampu­s, may find quiz questions difficult. “To be completely honest, a lot of the pub trivia I played online is too hard,” said Bill Patschak, a founder of the new site Bptrivia. But, as with any new skill, players improve through practice, learning not only facts but the types of questions asked, and the way writers might frame them.

Here are some ways to play bar trivia from home, with or without pants. Just bring your brain, and your own booze.

Bar trivia without the bar

Many major trivia companies, like King Trivia, Geeks Who Drink, Brainstorm­er Trivia! and the Big Quiz Thing, have all migrated some of their live events online. While O’brien’s weekly quizzes are invite- only, its monthly Frankenqui­zzes, found via the pub’s Facebook and Twitter pages, are open to all. There are two rounds of 15 questions each, plus t wo handouts ( now Google Docs) that players work on in snatched minutes between rounds.

If you can assemble a dedicated squad, remotely, try Online Quiz League USA, which Bahnaman co - f ounded and described as a bowling league for the brain. Each week, your f our- person team plays another via Zoom, Skype or Messenger. The season finishes with a cup tournament, when teams play for trophies and bragging rights.

Game on, camera off

If you prefer your quizzing on your own time, you can work your contacts to score an invite to Learned League, a 21,000- strong members- only club that lets you start or end each weekday with six synapse- tickling questions, delivered via email.

Or try Bptrivia, which has daily, monthly and race- against- t he clock quizzes, to be played i n your browser anytime. ( Some are free, others require a subscripti­on.)

There are also plenty of apps, video games and online games, like Random Trivia Generator. Or if you need more incentive to answer questions correctly, try Jackbox Games’ Murder Trivia Party and try to stay alive.

Quiz shows, remotely

If you love trivia, you are probably mourning the recent death of longtime “Jeopardy!” host Alex Trebek. But “Jeopardy!” will continue, and you can still take the qualifying test , now available remotely. “Jeopardy!” also offers a couple of apps so you can practice phrasing your answer in the form of a question. A voice- only game lets you play even during drive time. If current events are more your speed, NPR’S news quiz, “Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me,” has created a play- along game for smart speakers.

 ?? LUCI GUTIÉRREZ/ THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Having proliferat­ed on Zoom, Twitch and Facebook Live, quizzes look and feel different now. And while some still offer cash prizes, many function as fundraiser­s for struggling bars, food banks or the quiz companies themselves.
LUCI GUTIÉRREZ/ THE NEW YORK TIMES Having proliferat­ed on Zoom, Twitch and Facebook Live, quizzes look and feel different now. And while some still offer cash prizes, many function as fundraiser­s for struggling bars, food banks or the quiz companies themselves.

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