Big Bucks
Across The World
Saint Nick
Caught on Film
Holiday Tradition
100

This popular toy debuted in 1932 and is still the most-sold Toy of all time during Christmas.

Lego

100

In Japan, this popular item is eaten as a Christmas Day feast. 

Fried Chicken or KFC

100

This number is how many reindeer Santa has pulling his slay and yes including that one.

9

100

True or False every stunt and mechanism in Home Alone was practical.

True

100

Ornaments on a tree started in 16th century Germany using this item representing the tree of forbidden fruit in the Bible  

Apples

200

This is the total amount the average American will spend on Christmas gifts in 2024

$1,000

200

This Mexico tradition comes in the form of a seven-point star, symbolizing the seven deadly sins that are then broken to represent faith in God.

Piñata

200

In 1927 Santa was given this license by the US Government. 

Pilots License

200

Disney originally fired the director after he pitched this movie as a 30 minute TV special. The director was later asked to come back to make this full length film.

Nightmare Before Christmas

200

This symbol of love and fertility is from Celtic and Norse tradition.

Mistletoe

300

This Video Game was the most sold game at Christmas in 2023.

 Assassin's Creed Valhalla

300

In Germany, Saint Nicholas is entirely different from Santa Claus. Saint Nicholas leaves fruit and coins for good kids and sticks for bad kids in this location.

Shoes

300

This company came up with Santa's official design

Coca-Cola

300

True or False snow is the only CGI used in Elf.

True

300

During The Great Depression this Industry marketed using Santa to raise money and since created an on going tradition.

Dairy Industry. Cookies and Milk

400

This album was released in 1957 being the highest-grossing Christmas album. Selling more than 20 million copies worldwide and is considered a Christmas classic.

Elvis Presley's Elvis' Christmas Album

400

Iceland Christmas tradition is to exchange this item on Christmas eve.

Books

400

Iceland does not have a Santa Clause but they do this many Yule Lads

13

  • Sheep-Cote Clod: He tries to suckle yews in farmer's sheep sheds
  • Gully Gawk: He steals foam from buckets of cow milk
  • Stubby: He's short and steals food from frying pans
  • Spoon Licker: He licks spoons
  • Pot Scraper, aka Pot Licker: He steals unwashed pots and licks them clean 
  • Bowl Licker: He steals bowls of food from under the bed (back in the old days, Icelanders used to sometimes store bowls of food there—convenient for midnight snacking?)
  • Door Slammer: He stomps around and slams doors, keeping everyone awake 
  • Skyr Gobbler: He eats up all the Icelandic yogurt (skyr)
  • Sausage Swiper: He loves stolen sausages 
  • Window Peeper: He likes to creep outside windows and sometimes steal the stuff he sees inside
  • Door Sniffer: He has a huge nose and an insatiable appetite for stolen baked goods
  • Meat Hook: He snatches up any meat left out, especially smoked lamb 
  • Candle Beggar: He steals candles, which used to be sought-after items in Iceland
400

'A Christmas Story' is based on short stories published in by this magazine between 1964 and 1966.

Playboy Magazine

400

This tradition consists of burning a Yule log for twelve days to help protect a home from this.

Lightening and fire.

500

These Companies profit the most money during Christmas.

Coke, Starbucks and Aldi

500

In Poland, on Christmas Eve Polish families don’t are not allowed to do this, until someone spots the very first star shining in the sky.

Eat Dinner

500

This country writes the most letters to Santa Clause

France

500

Before Chemical Snow was invented in 1946. Film directors would use this to simulate snow.

Untoasted Cornflake

500

The Earliest Christmas celebration is said to be on December 25 in 336 CE in this city

Rome, The Catholic Church