16 Mar City Guesser 2.0 – Guess City Locations from Video Clips
For years City Guesser has been a popular geography game in which players have to guess the identity and location of a city based on Google Street View imagery. The new version of City Guesser replaces Google Street View imagery with street level video clips.
In City Guesser 2.0 players are shown video clips (silent or with background noise) and have to guess the location of the city they’re seeing. After each guess players are shown how close or far their guesses were from the actual city location. It’s a simple game while also being a challenging game.
City Guesser 2.0 offers games based on cities of the whole world and landmarks of the whole world. There are also country-specific versions of the game for the United States, Canada, Russia, England, France, Japan, India, Brazil, Australia, and Argentina. Additionally, there is a version of the game covering all of Asia and a version covering all of Europe.
Applications for Education
Some of the prompts in City Guesser are easier than others, but none are actually easy. To guess correctly players need to study the videos for little clues that tip-off the location. When students guess and discover the correct answers they may become curious about what they’re seeing. I’ve had this happen with students and adults when using previous version of City Guesser. They’ll start investigating the clues in the imagery in detail and ask questions like “what is the language on that billboard?”
This post originally appeared on Free Technology for Teachers
if you see it elsewhere, it has been used without permission.
For years City Guesser has been a popular geography game in which players have to guess the identity and location of a city based on Google Street View imagery. The new version of City Guesser replaces Google Street View imagery with street level video clips. In City Guesser 2.0 players are shown video clips (silent or with background noise) and have to guess the location of the city they’re seeing. After each guess players are shown how close or far their guesses were from the actual city location. It’s a simple game while also being a challenging game. City Guesser 2.0 offers games based on cities of the whole world and landmarks of the whole world. There are also country-specific versions of the game for the United States, Canada, Russia, England, France, Japan, India, Brazil, Australia, and Argentina. Additionally, there is a version of the game covering all of Asia and a version covering all of Europe. Applications for EducationSome of the prompts in City Guesser are easier than others, but none are actually easy. To guess correctly players need to study the videos for little clues that tip-off the location. When students guess and discover the correct answers they may become curious about what they’re seeing. I’ve had this happen with students and adults when using previous version of City Guesser. They’ll start investigating the clues in the imagery in detail and ask questions like “what is the language on that billboard?”This post originally appeared on Free Technology for Teachers
if you see it elsewhere, it has been used without permission.City Guesser, Educational Games, Free Technology For Teachers, Geography, geography games, Social Studies, World GeographyRead More
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