True-Size Geography Games
True-Size.com has become a go-to destination for anyone curious about the real dimensions of our world. It is best known for its interactive map that lets you compare the true size of countries. The site allows users to drag countries around the globe and make direct comparisons with other countries and regions around the world. It’s a simple idea with a powerful impact, often reshaping long-held assumptions about geography and scale.
Building on the success of its iconic map comparison tool, True-Size.com has now introduced a collection of interactive geography games that blend education with entertainment. These games take the site’s core idea - questioning how we perceive the world - and turns it into a series of fun map challenges.If you are a regular user of True-Size.com you might want to test what you have learned so far by playing this direct country comparison game. In this head-to-head challenge you need to guess which country is larger between the two randomly chosen countries presented to you.
🗺️ Map Packer
This game challenges you to drag and drop countries onto their correct position on a map of the world. The game starts relatively easily - with a number of the world's largest countries - but gets progressively harder as the game progresses. Could you drag the outline of Kyrgyzstan onto its rightful place on the world map?
How many Spains can you fit into China? This spatial reasoning game invites you to guess how many times one country would fit inside another, underscoring the sometimes surprising scale of nations.
🕳️ Land Hunter
Have you ever wondered where you would emerge if you tunneled straight through the Earth? Land Hunter lets you discover where you’d surface on the opposite side of the globe if you could tunnel through the Earth's core. Just set the target on your home and discover where your antipodean neighbors live.
🇺🇸 Flag Quiz
Test your vexillology skills! This simple game requires you to match the flags to their countries. You are shown a flag and you have to choose which country it represents from a list of four. There are 10 levels to complete with 5 flags to identify in each level.



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