Country Shape Games
Guess each country from its silhouette.

World
Guess countries from silhouettes across the full world set.

Africa
Practice African country shapes from coastlines, borders, and inland outlines.

Asia
Identify Asian countries by large land shapes, peninsulas, and island outlines.

Europe
Test compact European country shapes and distinctive coastlines.

North America
Recognize North American, Central American, and Caribbean country shapes.

Oceania
Practice readable Oceania and Pacific country silhouettes.

South America
Guess South American countries from their strong continental outlines.
Country shape games help you practice geography by recognizing each country from its silhouette. Instead of relying on flags, labels, capitals, or map position, you focus on the outline itself: coastlines, borders, islands, peninsulas, proportions, and the overall shape of the country.
Why country shape quizzes are useful
A country can feel familiar on a labeled map but become harder to recognize when the surrounding countries disappear. Shape practice trains that missing skill. It helps you connect a country name with a visual outline, which supports map quizzes, flag quizzes, capital practice, and general geography recall.
The world game is best for broad review, while regional games make the practice more focused. Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, Oceania, and South America each have different visual patterns, so learning by region helps you compare similar shapes without being overwhelmed by the full world set.
- Practice country outlines without labels or flags
- Learn regional shape patterns such as islands, peninsulas, coastlines, and inland borders
- Use 4-choice mode for recognition or typing mode for harder recall
How to choose a country shape game
Start with a region if you want a shorter quiz and clearer comparisons. Europe is good for compact borders and coastlines, Africa for large inland shapes and straight borders, Asia for peninsulas and archipelagos, and Oceania for island patterns across the Pacific.
If you want a broader challenge, choose the world shape quiz after practicing a few regions. Replaying shorter regional sets first usually makes the world game feel less random, because each silhouette already has a stronger visual identity.
