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The Impossible Quiz is a point-and-click quiz game that consists of 110 questions, [1] [2] using "Gonna Fly Now" as its main musical theme. Notorious for its difficulty, the quiz mixes multiple-choice trick questions similar to riddles, along with various challenges and puzzles. [1] [2] Despite the quiz's name and arduousness, the game is ...
Impossible (stylised as !mpossible) is a British television quiz show created by Hugh Rycroft and produced by Mighty Productions for BBC One.Hosted by Rick Edwards, the show has a maximum prize of £10,000 and features questions in which some answer choices are "impossible" or inconsistent with the given category.
The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page.
The Impossible Quiz meets WP:GNG and WP:WEB as it has received coverage from multiple outlets such as Polygon, Wired, Engadget, Rock Paper Shotgun, and CBR among other sources. I was initially surprised to find that no one had attempted to create an article about the game with some of these sources, until I saw that the article was SALTed over ...
As a journalist, he has written for The Observer, the Evening Standard and HuffPost. [1] From 2017 to 2021, he presented the BBC quiz show Impossible , and since November 2021 he has co-hosted the BBC Radio 5 Live breakfast show (replacing Nicky Campbell ), usually alongside Rachel Burden .
The Impossible Game is a 2009 one-button platform game developed and published by Fluke Games. [1] [2] The Windows, macOS and Linux port was developed by Grip Games. [3]
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, is a graph with six vertices and nine edges, often referred to as the utility graph in reference to the problem. [1] It has also been called the Thomsen graph after 19th-century chemist Julius Thomsen. It is a well-covered graph, the smallest triangle-free cubic graph, and the smallest non-planar minimally rigid graph.