Funny quizzes for middle school students. Quizzes that can liven up a middle school setting.
We’ve gathered a selection of fun quizzes recommended for middle school students!
When it comes to quizzes, there are many types like brain-training quizzes, trivia quizzes, logic/deduction quizzes, and rule-based quizzes.
You can even enjoy quizzes related to your hobbies, such as anime-themed quizzes or intro music quizzes!
In this article, we’ve picked out a variety of quizzes with the assumption that middle schoolers will enjoy them.
Whether you’re a middle schooler who loves quizzes, or you’re looking for something to try with friends on the weekend or during school breaks, give these a shot!
- Quiz for junior high school students
- [Hard] Riddles for junior high school students
- [Trick Quiz] Quiz Questions That Excite Everyone from Kids to Adults
- [Easy] Quiz for Middle School Students
- [Difficult] A top recommended quiz collection for junior high school students. Casual questions you can enjoy easily.
- [Easy] Riddles for Middle Schoolers
- Riddles for middle school students
- How many can you answer? A collection of fun school-related quiz ideas to guess and enjoy
- [For Junior High School Students] Fun Psychology Tests You Can Do During Break Time
- [Interesting] A collection of brain teaser quiz questions. Let's train your brain!
- [Interesting] Collection of Math Quiz Problems
- Fun quizzes that liven up the party. Quizzes everyone can enjoy.
- Let's get excited with a two-choice quiz that everyone—from kids to adults—can enjoy!
Fun quizzes for middle schoolers. Quizzes that will excite a middle school crowd (31–40)
Brain Training Inspiration Quiz

Many people probably enjoy brain-training quizzes, right? This collection brings together quiz questions that turn your thinking time into a workout for the brain.
There are seven questions in total, ranging from ones you can solve pretty smoothly to those that require a bit more thought.
Since most of them involve answering while looking at images or videos, many of the problems may feel easy to understand.
It’s so satisfying when you crack puzzles like these! Aim for that refreshing feeling and give your brain a good workout.
Number Search Quiz

This is a quiz where you have 15 seconds to find the target number among many numbers that appear on the screen.
It gets progressively harder.
If you do it while watching the video as a class, it will definitely boost concentration and lift the class mood—two birds with one stone.
How many seconds will it take everyone to find it?
Rearrangement Quiz

This “rearrangement quiz” is easy to create, but not necessarily easy to solve.
You turn a word into hiragana, shuffle the hiragana randomly, and then rearrange them correctly to guess the original word.
Since you’re just breaking up slightly longer words, you can add as many problems as you want.
It also seems great for brain training.
You could make it even more exciting by gradually increasing the number of characters to raise the difficulty and adding rules like answering within a time limit.
Prefecture Name Quiz

We learn the names of all 47 prefectures of Japan in elementary school—but can you still name them all? Many people might struggle if asked on the spot.
How about turning the prefectures into a quiz game? For example: “Which prefectures include the kanji ‘大’?” Set a time limit and see if you can answer in time.
If there are two or three prefectures that share the same kanji, you might find it surprisingly hard to recall them! Take your time, think it through, and try writing them down on paper as you go.
A turtle, a camel, and a rhinoceros are shopping. What will they buy?
A turtle, a camel, and a rhino go shopping…
When you imagine it, you can’t help but wonder what on earth is going on—sounds like a riddle, right? But let’s set that aside for now! Since they’re shopping, they must each have something they want to buy.
Still, thinking about items related to each animal won’t solve this puzzle.
You need to approach it from a completely different angle.
The key is to read the question repeatedly.
If you connect ‘kame’ (turtle), ‘rakuda’ (camel), and ‘sai’ (rhino), you get ‘kamera kudasai’ (which means ‘a camera, please’ in Japanese).
So the answer is ‘camera’!



