Quiz: Sci-Qi (a Science- and Speculative Fiction Quiz)
Monday, September 27, 2021
BCQC September Open | Report on the Science-Fiction Quiz
Sunday, September 19, 2021
BCQC September Open - The Ajai Ragde Memorial History-Geography Quiz - Report
Quiz: The Ajai Ragde Memorial History-Geography Quiz
Date & Time: 12 September 2021
Venue: Held over Zoom
Format: Elims + Finals
QMs: Kunal Sawardekar and Omkar Dhakephalkar
Results:
1st:
WIMWI Manaram: Rajiv Rai, Srinath B, Vinoo S at 274
2nd:
Vetes Vulpes: Tathagata Chatterjee, Archana Gupta, Ninad Sapute at 21
3rd:
ROTF: Navin, Swami, Manu at 204
4th:
Trevlling Kilroy: Anurakshat Gupta, Anirudh Anilkumar, Arnabh Sengupta at 201
5th:
Aila Jumbo: Ravi Mundoli, Ashwin Kumar, Samanth
6th:
Hammer and Tongs: Shouvik Guha, Anannya Deb, Jayashree Jayakar Mohanka at 182
7th:
QuizElite: Abhinav Dixit, Sushmita Sharma, Adarsh Dixit at 97
8th:
Three’s Company: Keshav, Ajay, Debashree at 58
A History Geography Quiz is an apt way to pay tribute to an esteemed member of the community and Mr Ajai Ragde was definitely one. I remember quizzing with him in BCQC Opens and by virtue of the draft system used in the finals, has couple of times even teamed up with him. History geography politics were his thing and he would stoically sit through the usual pop culture shit that youth quizzers of today revel in. In his mind, he must have been lamenting, purvicha Pune quizzes rahile nahin.
The responsibility of setting and conducting the quiz was entrusted in the able shoulders of messieurs Kunal ‘Psaw’ Sawardekar and Omkar ‘Dhake’ Dhakephalkar. Both have a strong record in setting good enjoyable quizzes and this latest specimen was no less.
To start with, we had a 30-question prelims with answers
to be filled up in a Google Form, as has become a common practice in the era of
Zoom quizzes. The questions were compact and pithy and led to very precise
answers. Of course, some participants still debated with the QMs on the
validity of their guesses, throwing Wikipedia entries as citation. The QMs very
efficiently handled the situation and carried on. The cut off for the finalists
was 24 and I was one of the top 8, having in typical Pune style, done a deal by
teaming up with MahaQuizzers Shouvik Guha and Jayshree Mohanka.
Moving to the finals, we had 32 questions on the pass with 3 sets of 4 written questions, each set on a certain theme. The first one was on colonial flags where the flash usually had some elements of the European power and an element referencing the colony. The second one was on panhandles The third set was on paleogeography.
The main set of 32 questions was on infinite bounds using the Arnold Variation. The QM, Psaw, correctly admonished an impertinent query on whether it should be called the Bangalore IR format. In addition there was pounce, of course, naturally, since it’s a Pune invention
The questions were super. My favourite was the reasons why there was a precise record of the date and time of a cataclysmic event in one part of the world (because of records kept about a very specific orphan tsunami in another part of the world).
The quiz was won by WIMWI Manram, the super group team of Vinoo Sanjay, Rajiv Rai and Srinath Bashyam. The finals started with 8 teams and ended with 6, a bit like in a long-distance race. That's one of the banes of the online quiz era. A normal which would have taken 2-3 hours offline now take 5-6 hours. Teams take ages to discuss on their team group chats and if they want to pounce they ask for time saying network issues.
Overall, an excellent quiz covering all continents and all eras from paleolithic era to modern day. We shall, hopefully, come back next year when this becomes an annual event in the BCQC calendar.
Report by: Anannya “Dada” Deb
Wednesday, August 18, 2021
BCQC August Open Quiz 2021 - Let There Be Rock - Report
Quiz: Let There Be Rock, the BCQC Rock Music
Date & Time: 8 August 2021, 10 am
Venue: Held over Zoom
Format: Written Quiz | 40 Qs worth 50 points
QMs: Aditya Gadre & Navin Rajaram
In 1977, AC/DC proclaimed ‘Let There Be Rock’. Cut to 44 years later in
pandemic times, our QMs thought it was best to follow the sermon and rock it
out at 10 in the morning on a Sunday. Yes, please! Hundred-and-twenty
individuals also seemed to be in agreement, as we saw incredible participation
of 60 teams. Thank you, everyone!
A written quiz ensures all teams get to have a crack at every question, with no
one going home (err, yeah) feeling left out and suffering the wrath of a
prelims. And, what better than hearing good music all the way through! And,
it’s here where the best bit about the quiz was - the focus was on music
listening. The quiz had a high number of audio and videos, as any good music
quiz should be. Given this stress on multimedia, the quiz was also conducted
glitch-free and at a leisurely Sunday pace, despite there being Dada’s General Quiz to follow.
Full points also for the research put into the quiz, covering a wide gamut of
topics, including genres, film soundtracks, album covers, song origins and band
name etyms, music videos, cover versions, guitar techniques, samples and
inspirations and a lot more.
The quiz
was dotted with a bunch of quirky tidbits – ranging from naming a 60s band from
Liverpool (not the Beatles! Hint: Liverpool FC) to identifying Grace Slick from
her paintings (question showed images from Alice in Wonderland as drawn by the
Jefferson Airplane vocalist) to naming Wish You Were Here based on a clue that
the LP sleeve was packed to trap the smell of burning human flesh! However, the
unanimous decision on the best question of the quiz was probably Anu Malik sir
taking ‘inspiration’ from KISS’ I Was Made For Loving You Baby ft. Sallu bhai.
The bulk of the questions seemed to border around classic and hard rock from
the 60s and 70s (perhaps QM bias?). Higher representation from the so-called
modern eras and other genres of rock music could have possibly made it a more
well-rounded quiz. Music from this century also only made few isolated
appearances. To talk about a pet peeve, the count of three questions on Indian
rock, a goldmine that it is, could perhaps have been slightly more.
Incidentally, two of those were from the post-2000s era!
That
said, kudos to the QMs for keeping the quiz accessible and interesting with a
heady mix of core funda and workoutables. The quiz mostly concentrated on all
the big names and famous songs – from Led Zep to Alanis Morissette to Hendrix
to Elvis to RHCP to GnR to Van Halen’s Eruption to Who’s Tommy to Zero’s PSP12
to Heart’s Barracuda, to name a few.
A special mention to #SoccerKils (Udupa & Santosh). Fact that they won the
quiz isn’t why we’re writing about them, but the margin by which they pulled it
off is astounding. They completely maxed the quiz with a phenomenal score of
49/50. One question had to be cancelled due to a Zoomcommentboxgate. The next
best score was 43 and then a bunch of teams clubbed in the 38-37 range.
To reiterate, great music was always at the forefront of this quiz. As a
parting gift, our generous QMs actually created a Spotify playlist featuring
every song that found its mention in the quiz, resulting in 4 hours of
rockgasm. Give it a listen! Playlist follows the report.
I heard it through the grapevine that the QMs are planning further editions of
this quiz and if the first one is anything to go by, it’s most noble a
decision.
P.S: The lack of any funda on The Beatles in a rock music quiz was taken up by
the diarist and amicably settled in an out-of-court settlement with the
quiz-setters. Pfft.
Scores:
49 #SoccerKills Thejaswi Udupa Santosh J.S.
43 Pebble Fans Nikhil Sonde Sumant Srivathsan
38 Definitely Maybe Arijit Sen Indranath Mukherjee
Corrosion of Conformity Mihir Jayaraman Nitish Khadiya
37 Fleetwood Macbeth Gopal Kidao Srivats Ram
Bridge over Roger Waters Sethu Madhavan Berty Ashley
Sultans of Fling Samyak Chaturvedi Amrit Visa
35 RajaRam Jam/EyeHateGadre Varun Rajiv Ashwin Kumar
34 Masters Hammer Aswath Venkataraman Rahul Raguram
In the Annals of History Bodhisattva Basu Annway Ghosh
33 Do It Duet Akash Gupta Arun TP
Eleanor Rigby's Revolver Kunal Roy Siddhanth Rao
Mamas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Quizbois Anisha Karnail Nandagopal
31 Van Halen T-Shirt Jamie David Lee Roth Anderson Angus Eddie Van Halen Creighton
North Campus Pop Art Experimental Teamup Arnuv Joshi Rupak Jain
30 Vowel movement Sohan Adi
Chowder Mookie Neel Chaudhari Dhruv Mookerji
Fossils Fan Club Arindam Dutta Debanjan Bose
Mostly Ordinary Troy Cumpsty
29 Inglorious quizzards Samiran Mondal Joy Bannerjee
Abhishek Abhishek Kapoor
Potentially Hazardous Objects Paul Hillman
28 The Ozzy Akhtar project Suraj Menon
27 Rock N'Rolla Nikhil Soneja Sandeepan Chaudhuri
Mohiner Ghoraguli Abhiroop Dey Arijit Malakar
26 Greta On Fleek Sumo Vikram Rajan
Polk Salad Annie Aniruddha Sen Gupta Srijit Kumar
25 Cohen Cobain Kalidas Souhardya Pramanik Agnidev Bandyopadhyay
GoVansa Govind Grewal Vansa David
Wu Han Clan Rushabh Menon Shashwat Salgaocar
Coffee and Ebony Sahil Gupta Pranav Pawar
23 Fortunate Sons Adit Prahlad
Report by: Debanjan Bose
Monday, August 09, 2021
BCQC August Open Quiz 2021 - In August Company - Report
Quiz: In August Company (General Quiz)
Date & Time: 8 August 2021 at 1:30 pm
Venue: Zoom
QM: Anannya Deb
Scores:
1st: Two Proctors and a Doctor (Dr. Navin Jayakumar, Abhinav Dasgupta, Avinash Mudaliar) - 170 pts
2nd: Peter Panchali Parajito (Debanjan Bose, Sachin Deshpande, Sourjo Sengupta) - 140 pts
3rd: Dream team (Arnabh Sengupta, Anirudh Anilkumar, Shaayak Chatterjee) - 133 pts
4th: Rana Protip (Venky Srinivasan, Kunal Sawardekar, Ranajeet Soman) - 127 pts
5th: East Bengal United (Shouvik Guha, Prithwish Datta, Deepanjan Deb) - 123 pts
6th: Narulkar, Nerulkar, Punekar (Sania Narulkar, Samrat Sengupta, Aditya Gadre) - 120 pts
7th: Remembrance of Things Fast (Navin Rajaram, Manu Sudhakar, Swaminathan Ganesh) - 107 pts
8th: Huey Dewey Louie (Akash Gupta, Arun TP, Zaman Khan) - 103 pts
9th: No Name (Krishnamurthy Ganesh, Rajagopal PS, Ajay Parasuraman) - 83 pts
10th: Maris Troika (Thejasvi Udupa, Santosh Swaminathan, Ramkey V) - 72 pts
Report:
Anannya Deb aka Dada has made it a habit of conducting super quizzes in his unique, nonchalant style - and this was no different.
We started with a written elim which had sparsely worded, crisp questions on a wide range of topics - including topics that Dada unapologetically includes which feature in no other QM's quizzes. The elims were a mix of workoutable and TIL - which is a good way to eliminate in my opinion. Also Good Guy Dada was lenient and decided to take 10 teams into the finals because the bottom two teams were very close to the cut off.
The finals had 2 written rounds. One on North Eastern Guitarists - one of those topics which no one else will put a question on in their quiz, let alone three. And the other on Olympic posters which teams did better at.
There were two passing rounds had 18 questions each. The questions were clustered in loosely defined (whimsical) triads across a large variety of topics. Dada managed to make seemingly obscure stuff also interesting and most admirably - covered an insane geographic spread in his quiz - from Africa, to South Asia to South America. This is something that most QMs struggle with and tend to restrict to the US and UK. The quiz also very nicely operated in the intersections of topics - politics and sport, lifestyle and work, stories and history, fauna and folklore - and wasn't really focused on any one topic per se. In that sense the quiz felt truly 'general' and not like it had a preponderance of any pet topics.
As for the results - the quiz was handsomely won by Team 3 - but at least 5 other teams were in contention for a podium finish till the last few questions. We had some cracking answers and on another positive note - people were on video and seemed to take part in the quiz in the right spirit.
Summary | BCQC's COVID Fundraiser Series
The four quizzes were (click for report):
1. Football Quiz by Ranajeet Soman
2. Food and Drinks Quiz by Krish Ashok, Pranav "Floyd" Joshi, and Aditya Gadre
3. India Quiz by Debanjan Bose and Sachin "Talent" Deshpande
4. General Quiz by Suraj "UNESCO-certified best QM" Menon
With the total participants for all quizzes being above 150+ on average, we are proud of raising more than 2.8 Lakhs via quizzing. Doing something good while doing something one loves is a rare occurrence and at BCQC we did it, and gave everybody an opportunity to do the same.
At this time, we would like to thank everybody: participants, quizmasters, spectators for making this a success.
Keep quizzing, and stay tuned to out social media handles to know of more upcoming quizzes!
Summary by: Omkar Dhakephalkar
COVID Fundraiser Series | Report on the Food and Drinks Quiz
Day, Date:
Sunday, 19-6-2020
Quiz: BCQC COVID Fundraiser Series,
Food and Drinks Quiz
Venue/Centre: Zoom
Fest/Organized by:
BCQC
Flavour: Food and Drinks
QMs: Krish Ashok, Pranav “Floyd” Joshi, Aditya Gadre
Scores:
1. We are like this wonly: Thejaswi Udupa + Anustup Datta at 265
2. Wimwi Manaram: Srinath Bhashyam + Abhishek Kapoor + Vinoo Sanjay at 230
3. Godzilla vs. King Kong vs. Preetham: Navin Rajaram + Preetham + Santosh at
210
4. Coastal Compadres: Anirudh Anilkumar + Arnabh Sengupta + Shaayak Chatterjee
at 200
5. Something Something Cauvery: Sachin Deshapnde + Nikhil Sonde + Sumant
Srivathsan at 180
6. Meghshyam Shirodkar + Anand Shivshankar at 175
7. The Okay Millennials: Atulya Bharadwaj + Aswath Venkataraman + Aadisht
Khanna at 135
8. Khan Daan: Yasho Tamaskar + Rajeev Chakravarthi + Navin Sharma at 125
The Food Quiz was the second installment in the BCQC's Covid relief fundraiser quizzes. Aditya Gadre, Pranav Joshi and Krish Ashok took up the mantle of hosting it. The quiz had been marketed as a general quiz on food which is exactly what it was.
The elims were a breezy affair with most questions having food a connect in some tangential form but the answers themselves required little to no knowledge of it. Answers covered various topics like movies, sports, history, geography and literature.
Predictably the elims were a high scoring affair.
The finals had a bit more food-centric stuff but still managed to balance it with the general side of things due to nicely framed questions and timely verbal hints by the QMs.
Krish Ashok, who has written a well-received book on improving domestic cooking, chimed in periodically with an interesting anecdote or technical/scientific concept explaining the answer. The written rounds also had interesting marriages between food and chemistry and food and music. The competition was neck to neck and until the last few questions especially for the 2nd-3rd-4th places.
Overall, an excellent buffet of topics with snackable questions, whose taste will be remembered in the quizzing circles for years to come.
Report by: Ranajeet Soman
