<p>This may be old, but it hasn't ceased to amaze me (although the possiblities of a twenty question test with 5 answers for each and about 6 strings (and I is great 6(5^20) with distinct questions). But anyway...</p>
<p>You won!
Is it one of these ...
an eyeball
a sofa
a loofah
a uvula
a tuba
a subway
guava
paella
hope
an ovary
an oboe (wood wind)
a hoof
a hub (computer networking)
an oven
a buffalo </p>
<p>Nope. It's an opal (mineral). Jeez, it wasn't even close.</p>
<p>You got it because I added it. If you beat it (i.e. it doesn't know it), it gives you a blank to add it. It gets its information from people playing.</p>
[quote]
You won!
Is it one of these ...
a roof
bunk beds
a bedroom
a kitchen
a ping-pong table
an attic
the ceiling
the floor
stairs (steps)
a bathtub
drywall
an elevator
an outhouse
a bed
a balcony
a filing cabinet
<p>"The most popular variant is called "Animal, Vegetable, Mineral, Other". In this version, the answerer tells the questioners at the start of the game whether the object is an animal, vegetable, mineral, or other. The game defines an animal as a member of the animal kingdom, a vegetable as anything of the plant kingdom, a mineral as anything geological, and other as anything else. This can produce some odd technicalities, such as a wooden table being classified as a vegetable (since wood comes from trees)."</p>