Ranked by monthly English Wikipedia pageviews — the people the world can't stop reading about.
German artist (1805-1855)
professor of adolescent and educational psychology
Argentine singer (1935-2009)
American actor
American filmmaker
American singer and actress (born 1942)
Spanish distance runner
Kenyan marathon runner and Olympic medalist
American screenwriter and suspected murderer
Queen of the United Kingdom from 1952 to 2022
French chef and culinary writer (1846–1935)
president of the United States from 1989 to 1993 (1924–2018)
President of the United States (2017–2021; since 2025)
Indian film director, theatre personality
American diplomat
Danish association football player
American singer-songwriter (born 1989)
Argentine paleontologist (1928–2020)
politician and former member of the U.S. Congress representing New York's 3rd district
American actress and singer
lighthouse keeper
researcher
American actor (1924–2004)
Speaker of the United States House of Representatives
5th-century BCE Greek philosopher
British political candidate
8th President of the Maldives since 2023
American rapper (born 1995)
Indian rapper, singer and composer (1993–2022)
English darts player (born 2007)
American filmmaker (born 1970)
English writer and philologist (1892–1973)
American actor
American YouTuber (2002-)
Libyan general (1967–2025)
Indian film producer and actress
British stand-up comedian
Professor from Mahidol University
Thai footballer
Canadian actor (born 2001)
Israeli soldier
American politician (born 1983)
Filipino actress and singer
Australian editor, publisher, and activist (born 1971)
Indian cricketer
American aviator and government official
American investor
American singer
virginian Political candidate for statewide office, former delegate in Virginia
Duke of Bourbon
Each question has a difficulty based on how well-known the person is (based on wikipedia pageview data). Harder questions are worth more points:
| Difficulty | Base Points |
|---|---|
| Easy | 100 |
| Medium | 200 |
| Hard | 400 |
| Expert | 800 |
Answer correctly in a row to build a streak. Each correct answer in your streak adds +10% to the score amount above. For example, a streak of 5 earns 50% extra, a streak of 10 earns DOUBLE, and so on.