All good, but one MAJOR flaw.

User Rating: 5.5 | Trivial Pursuit PS3
This game could have been so great. It's got nice clean graphics, a great variety of questions, and 3 fun modes of play. So why did I score it so low?

The answer is: the map questions. For some reason the game will try to be fancy and show you a map, asking you to choose the correct answer to their question off the map, or sometimes point to the approximate location.

Sounds good right? Well its not for one very big reason: the locations on the map have no names attached to them. In other words; if you don't have the location of every single city or country in the entire world map already committed to memory, you won't be able to answer these questions. And they come up VERY frequently. As for the point-and-choose questions, they're almost as stupid, but at least you can "ball-park" your answer.

Example: "What city was the Pied Piper from?" Most people instantly know it's Hamelin. However, try finding Hamelin with no help on a map. They don't even have country boarders drawn in. It's absolutely absurd to expect that everyone playing this game knows the topography of the entire world without so much as boarders drawn in. It's mind-blowing and actually destroys the game irreperably.

It makes no sense. They let you choose from 4 possible answers on the normal questions, but for naming city's we're expected to know the exact locations across the entire globe? It really makes no sense at all which leads me to believe that this game shipped broken. This must have been an unplanned mistake. It has to be.

Don't buy this game. I know I scored it above a 5.0, making it passable, but I cannot recommend that you buy this. You will never get to play a fair multiplayer game on this unless you and your co-players are world-map experts. IDK how many games I've lost when I knew the answer but lost due to this preposterous mistake.

SO much potential here; gone to waste for one silly mistake ( I shudder to think of this being a design decision). It's just so sad.

While I'm here I might as well complain about the lack of online. Someone tell EA that trivia/board games in this day and age are absolutely required to have an online component.