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I actually got the first one because it was Egypt. Then it asked me where Guinea was and I quit after getting around 10 guesses wrong. I think it should be like 3 guesses and then just show you.

some territories are moderated

It does! Actually right after three guesses, there’s a pulse around the correct country every time you click. It’s subtle, but maybe I’ll make it stronger in the future. The three countries in Africa with Guinea in the name are actually the ones that were most elusive to me before doing this quiz a few times.

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120 sats \ 4 replies \ @Murch 7h

Guinea, Equatorial Guinea, and Guinea-Bissau are also my kryptonite. I also keep mixing up Zimbabwe and Zambia.

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50 sats \ 3 replies \ @grayruby 7h

Why are there so many Guineas?

Guinea pigs are cool though.

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120 sats \ 0 replies \ @Murch 4h

Your question piqued my interest, so I looked this up. The Guilf of Guinea is the name of the part of the Atlantic Ocean stretching from Gabon to Liberia and Guinea seems to have been used colloquially to refer to the entire West Coast of Africa for some time.

Via https://www.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/3450ws/why_are_so_many_countries_called_guinea/:

That’s how many of the European colonies in the region took on names like French Guinea, Spanish Guinea, Portuguese Guinea, and German Guinea.
  • Portuguese Guinea became Guinea-Bissau (named after the city of Bissau).
  • French Guinea became just plain Guinea (though it's sometimes called Guinea-Conakry after its capital).
  • Spanish Guinea became Equatorial Guinea after its location near the equator.
  • German Guinea dropped the Guinea part entirely became Togo and Cameroon, after their historical names.

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40 sats \ 1 reply \ @jasonb OP 5h

I believe the Portuguese called that whole area Guinea back in the day. I think it’s also where Papua New Guinea in South America gets its name from; through the tragic migrations of the middle passage.

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20 sats \ 0 replies \ @Murch 4h

Papua New Guinea is in Oceania, and the Guyanas in South America are named from an Amerindian term meaning “land of many waters”.

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Haha I must have been so far off that I wasn't even looking in that region. Haha

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