SixQuestions Aims to be the Internet’s Trivia Provider of Choice
300,000 members and growing, SixQuestions is capitalizing on the strong desire for a great online trivia game. Offering the most up to the minute trivia and a very unique approach, SixQuestions aims to be the world leader in trivia.
(PRWEB) May 27, 2005 -- Trivia is king? Trivia has long had a reputation for
providing killer content. Just look at past trivia successes as ‘Trivial
Pursuit’ and ‘Jeopardy’. It’s a wonder that no game has yet emerged as the
premier online trivia game. Introduce SixQuestions.com (http://www.sixquestions.com), a game that rewards players for
both asking great Trivia Questions and answering Trivia questions correctly. The
game offers huge prizes and the most up to the minute trivia
available.
Already 300,000 members and growing, it seems there is some
appeal to the format. The game runs on a points based system. Points are
redeemed as good as cash in the extensive prize catalog. Players receive points
in their account each day they login and also receive points for doing just
about anything positive on the site. This includes writing trivia questions.
Players submit up to 20 questions each day and receive one point every time
their question is published. These questions all go into a central database and
are then redistributed in the form of six question quizzes. The members wager
their points each hour on these quizzes and at the end of every hour the
winnings are paid out. After each quiz is taken the player has the opportunity
to rate the questions they were given. This process weeds out the bad questions
from the active database of questions. The result is a very manicured database
of a few hundred thousand questions that has been simmered down from
millions.
"Its really quite amazing the way the system works itself out,”
said Christopher Hansen, Content Director for SixQuestions.com. “The database
might get hot with trivia questions about Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes but once
that story gets old those types of questions start getting dropped from the
system. It all works out in a very natural manner.”
SixQuestions (http://www.sixquestions.com) launched in March of 2004 and is
based in New York City.
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/5/prweb244199.htm