has published a World Cup quiz that asks readers to name the leading scorer from each of the top 20 countries. The prompt is framed around the race for Most Goals In World Cup History, but the answers are not laid out in the teaser.
The quiz is being pushed on day five of the World Cup, which gives the question immediate relevance for fans following the tournament as it unfolds. It asks for national scoring leaders drawn from FIFA's global rankings, turning a simple trivia challenge into a test of how well readers know the game beyond the live action.
That setup matters because the teaser does not give away the list it is testing. Readers are told what kind of answer to supply, and how the countries are selected, but not which players belong to each country. That gap is the point: the quiz is built to make people work for the names rather than hand them over.
The format also points to a broader editorial trick. The page is not just one quiz, but a gateway to other football and sports quizzes and World Cup-related items, suggesting the aim is to keep readers moving through more trivia while the tournament is under way. For anyone trying to chase the Most Goals In World Cup History angle, the missing answer key is the hook and the obstacle at the same time.
What comes next is straightforward: readers either know the scorers off the top of their heads or they do not. The teaser leaves that judgment in the hands of the audience, which is why the quiz works as a quick test and not a full explainer.

