If you are not sure where to start, this page helps you choose between Europe, Asia, Africa, North America, South America, and Oceania based on difficulty, quiz size, and practice goal.
You do not need to begin with every world flag at once. Start with a continent that matches your confidence level and the amount of time you want to spend in a first round.
With 12 countries, it is the simplest way to finish a full round, build confidence, and get used to the quiz format.
23 countries keep the round manageable, which makes it a practical first stop when you want a short session without jumping into a huge set.
Many players already recognize some European flags, so Europe can feel easier to stick with in the beginning.
The set is small, but several flags reward careful attention to smaller visual differences.
This is not a strict ranking. It is a practical starting guide based on quiz size, how often flags get mixed up, and how demanding a first round usually feels.
12 countries. The easiest place to start if you want a smaller set and a complete round that feels achievable right away.
14 countries. The set is light, but some flags reward careful comparison, so it is good for detail practice without a heavy workload.
23 countries. A practical bridge between very short sets and larger regional quizzes.
45 countries. The flags may feel more familiar, but there are still plenty of similar color patterns that need side-by-side comparison.
47 countries. The visual range is broader, which makes it a better fit once you are comfortable finishing a full regional round.
54 countries. It is the largest set here and works best once you are ready to spend more time comparing similar color combinations.
Continent quizzes are most useful when you want a clearer decision than just jumping into the full world set.
You want to break world flags into smaller groups instead of facing every country at once.
You need a smaller set so colors, stripes, crests, and layouts are easier to compare.
You want to finish a round quickly and decide afterward whether to keep going.
You need to learn one region first, then expand toward the full world map.
You want regional practice to feel solid before returning to the full world set.
Regional practice makes it easier to see what to review next instead of looking at only one overall score.
These answers are meant to help you pick a first continent, not just explain how the quiz works.
Start with the set you can finish today, then expand once that round feels comfortable.