Yes or No
Greek? Latin? Both?!
Imagine Dragons
Fictional Spaceships
Novels by Numbers
Compulsory Psychology
100

First released in 2006, this Nintendo console was their first since the GameCube in 2001.

What is the Wii/Oui ("Yes" in French)?

100

Psyche, from which we get Psychology, means this in Greek.

What is "mind" or "soul"?

100

Voiced by Eddie Murphy, this dragon was demoted from protecting the family (though he later gets the position back by helping the family's daughter expel the Huns from China). 

Who is Mushu?

100

Famously piloted by Han Solo, this ship can do the Kessel Run in less than twelve parsecs (which is confusing for anyone who knows what a parsec is). 

What is the Millennium Falcon?
100

This dystopian George Orwell novel, written in 1948, was a stern warning against totalitarianism (and gave us some cool Newspeak phrases). 

What is 1984?

100
A founding father of Psychology, he developed his "talking cure," where his patients would lie on a couch, talk about their problems, and tell him about their dreams. (He can also be found in action figure form.)

Who is Sigmund Freud?

200

A shy enemy in the Mario franchise, or something a ghost might say to scare you. 

What is Boo/Bù ("No" in Mandarin)?

200
The word personality comes from the Greek persona, meaning this.

What is "mask"?

200

The Pokemon Charizard (despite being a winged lizard that breathes fire) is not technically a dragon type (only dragon-like), but this Pokemon is. 

Who is Dragonite?

200

Captained at times by both James T. Kirk and Jean-Luc Picard, this ship has a simple mission: to boldy go where no one has gone before.

What is the Enterprise?
200

Books, as we all know, are for losers. At least, that's what the world thinks in this Ray Bradbury novel, where firemen set fires instead of putting them out and books are burned on sight.

What is Fahrenheit 451?

200

This behavioral psychologist developed the theory of operant conditioning, possibly aided by his ample forehead space that gave his brain some breathing room. 

Who is B.F. Skinner?

300

The current number of Supreme Court Justices, or the number of classic Greek muses. 

What is Nine/Nein ("No" in German)?

300

The phrase we learned (post hoc ergo prompter hoc) about the dangers of drawing conclusions just because two things happen consecutively, roughly translates to this.

What is "after it, therefore because of it"?

300

Sometimes animated and sometimes Benedict Cumberbatch, this dragon kicked the dwarves out of their home in Erebor (until a hobbit helps them get it back). 

Who is Smaug?

300

In Wall-E, humanity now lives aboard this ship built by the Big-N-Large corporation, though things aren't going great. 

What is the Axiom?

300

If you like reading books about places, this 1859 Charles Dickens novel gives you double the value at half the price. 

What is A Tale of Two Cities

300

If behaviorist John B. Watson owes anyone an apology, he should probably start with this person who, thanks to Watson's experiments, was conditioned to fear white, fuzzy things as a baby ("Now he even fears Santa Claus!"). 

Who is Little Albert?

400

The Ionian, The Baltic, or the Caspain, for example. 

What is a Sea/Sí ("Yes" in Spanish)?

400

From the pseudo-Latin for "I, myself," this was the name that Sigmund Freud gave to the part of personality that others see that has to balance desires and expectations. 

What is the ego?

400

In all the glory the original Playstation would allow, this young dragon was tasked with freeing all of his dragon buddies from crystal cages while still learning to fly (he could glide though!).

Who is Spyro?

400

In this 1968 Stanley Kubrick film, the spaceship Discovery One is perfect for exploration... right up until it tries to kill the crew. 

What is 2001: A Space Odyssey?

400

A paradoxical, no-win situation, or a 1961 Joseph Heller novel about a fighter pilot squad set on the fictional island of Pianosa in WWII. 

What is Catch-22?

400

Perhaps the most famous dog spit scientist in history, he had a laboratory in St. Petersburg where he developed his theory of classical conditioning. (His name should ring a bell.)

Who is Ivan Pavlov?

500

You might find one on a basketball court or at a hockey rink, but probably not at a baseball field (unless you're behind home plate). 

What is a Net/Nyet ("No" in Russian)?

500

Considered a pole on a personality scale for sociability, this quality is named after the Latin for "outward + turning toward." 

What is "extraversion"?
500

The Luckdragon from The NeverEnding Story (pictured right), he wise and loyal (and also 43 feet long). 

Who is Falkor?

500

Even though he named it after a battle he lost, Captain Malcolm Reynolds adores this ship, the primary setting for the series Firefly

What is Serenity?

500

Featuring my favorite mundane reason for time travel, the title of this 2011 Stephen King novel might be easier to remember for history buffs. 

What is 11/22/63?

500

A lot of people have heard the term 'CAT Scan,' but a lot fewer know that it actually stands for this (and no actual cats are involved). 

What is "Computerized Axial Tomography"?

M
e
n
u