How to play
What to do in this round
- Read each state prompt and locate it in United States on the map.
- Use skips when needed so you can keep building pace instead of stalling.
- Finish the round and replay to strengthen recall through repetition.
United States · Find All · Easy
Find All gives you full-coverage rounds that expose every weak spot across United States on a modern 3D map of the United States. Optional skips let you keep momentum while still coming back to tough prompts on the next replay.
Find All in United States asks you to place states quickly and accurately on a modern 3D map of the United States, helping you learn the lower 48 framework plus Alaska and Hawaii, where coastlines, regional clusters, and outliers sharpen state placement memory. Longer runs force full-region recall, which is ideal when you want complete coverage instead of a short sample. Because skipping is available, the round works well for both practice and casual replay sessions.
Practice flow
This page keeps the region, mode, and modifiers fixed so you can compare runs, build repeatable geography practice, and learn how a modern 3D map of the United States behaves over time.
On repeat runs you can measure whether the back half of the map is getting easier, not just the countries you already know well. Because the prompts stay inside the same region and mode, repeated runs build location memory, border awareness, and faster pattern recognition on the 3D map.
Use the skip option as a practice tool first, then replay the same route and aim to rely on it less as repeat runs quickly turn the lower-48 grid into a mental scaffold while Alaska and Hawaii stop feeling like detached bonus prompts.
Local highscores
No runs saved yet. Finish a round to add your first score.
How to play
Why it helps
This version helps you build a stronger mental map of United States, including location, relative position, and border awareness on a modern 3D map of the United States. It is especially helpful for learning the lower 48 framework plus Alaska and Hawaii, where coastlines, regional clusters, and outliers sharpen state placement memory. Longer runs force full-region recall, which is ideal when you want complete coverage instead of a short sample.
Study value
This version helps you build a stronger mental map of United States, including location, relative position, and border awareness on a modern 3D map of the United States. It is especially helpful for learning the lower 48 framework plus Alaska and Hawaii, where coastlines, regional clusters, and outliers sharpen state placement memory. Longer runs force full-region recall, which is ideal when you want complete coverage instead of a short sample.
FAQ
Full-region coverage and long-form map memory in United States, with 50 prompts on a modern 3D map of the United States and an estimated round length of 9 min.
Yes. This route is approachable for newer players because the 3D map gives strong visual structure while you learn the lower 48 layout, the Gulf and Atlantic curves, the Mountain West interior, and remembering where Alaska and Hawaii sit apart from the mainland.
Replaying helps convert recognition into memory. Fixed runs make it easier to compare pace, accuracy, and decision-making in United States, and on repeat runs you can measure whether the back half of the map is getting easier, not just the countries you already know well.
Related quizzes
Related · United States · Find 10 · Easy
Find states across United States on a modern 3D map of the United States. Skip is available if you want to keep the round moving. Best for short practice sessions, warm-ups, and daily geography streaks.
Related · United States · Find 10 · Medium
Find states across United States on a modern 3D map of the United States. Every prompt must be solved in order. Best for short practice sessions, warm-ups, and daily geography streaks.
Related · United States · Find 10 · Medium
Match flags to states across United States on a modern 3D map of the United States. Skip is available if you want to keep the round moving. Best for short practice sessions, warm-ups, and daily geography streaks.