Free Islamic Trivia

Who Wants to Be a Scholar?

Test your knowledge of Quran, Seerah, Fiqh, and Islamic history. 15 questions, 4 lifelines, every answer sourced.

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No sign-up required · No ads · Works offline

Why Muslim Trivia?

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4 Difficulty Levels

From basics every Muslim knows to deep scholarly knowledge. Pick your level.

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15 Questions Per Game

Progressive difficulty with checkpoints. Use 4 lifelines to help along the way.

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Every Answer Sourced

Quran ayahs, authentic hadith, and scholarly references. Learn even when you get it wrong.

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No Ads, No Accounts

Just play. No sign-up, no haram ads, no distractions. Works offline too.

6 Categories of Islamic Knowledge

Questions span every major area of Islamic learning

📖Quran
🕌Seerah
⚖️Fiqh
🏛️Islamic History
🤲Daily Deen
🌙Aqeedah

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Islamic trivia?
Islamic trivia is a fun way to test and expand your knowledge of Islam through questions and answers. Topics include the Quran, the life of the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ, Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh), Islamic history, daily practices, and core beliefs (aqeedah). Muslim Trivia turns this into an exciting Millionaire-style game with lifelines, checkpoints, and sourced answers.
How can I test my Islamic knowledge?
You can test your Islamic knowledge right here by playing "Who Wants to Be a Scholar." Choose from four difficulty levels, answer 15 progressively harder questions, and use lifelines when you get stuck. After each game, review every question with its source — Quran ayahs, hadith references, and scholarly citations — so you learn even from mistakes.
Is this quiz suitable for kids?
Absolutely! The Beginner difficulty level is designed for Muslim children aged 8-12 and covers basics like the five pillars, the names of daily prayers, and simple Quran facts. The game is completely ad-free with no inappropriate content — just wholesome Islamic learning in a fun, game-show format.
Where do the questions and answers come from?
Every single question includes a verifiable source reference. Quran questions cite the specific surah and ayah number. Hadith questions reference the collection name and hadith number (e.g., Sahih al-Bukhari 528). Historical and scholarly questions cite reputable Islamic sources. We never include unsourced Islamic content.
What difficulty levels are available?
Four levels: Beginner (basics any Muslim knows — great for kids and new Muslims), Intermediate (regular mosque-goer knowledge), Advanced (weekend school graduate and beyond), and Scholar (deep knowledge required — for serious students of Islamic knowledge). Each level has sub-difficulties that make questions progressively harder within your chosen level.

Ready to Test Your Knowledge?

Choose your difficulty and see how far you can go.

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