Chocolate and Snacks
This page collects all our chocolate, crisps, and snack-themed quizzes in one place. It turns out that people have very strong opinions about British confectionery — which bars were unfairly discontinued, which crisps were better in the 1980s, whether a Fudge bar counts as proper chocolate — and those opinions tend to produce good quiz conversations. We've also included a handful of American chocolate bars and classic soft drinks, because both categories generate their own heated debates.
Everything here is an instant PDF download. You print as many copies as you need, and a quiz master answer sheet is included with every product. Most of our picture quizzes also come with a clues version — the same quiz but with some letters of each answer filled in — so you can adjust the difficulty for your group. There are a few different formats on this page: picture quizzes, dingbats, anagrams, and a multiple choice trivia round. The section introductions below explain how each format works.
Chocolate picture quizzes
Each of our chocolate picture quizzes fits on a single printed A4 or letter sheet. There are twelve questions, with space on the sheet for players to write their answers. A separate quiz master answer sheet is included with every download, so there's nothing extra to prepare. Most of our picture quizzes also come with a clues version — the same twelve images but with some letters of each answer filled in, which lets you adjust the difficulty for your audience. Where a quiz title includes "Mystery" or "Close-up", the photos are cropped or close-up shots that make even familiar subjects harder to identify than you'd expect.
Retro Close-up UK Chocolate
Twelve classic UK chocolate bars to identify from close-up shots of the packaging or the product itself. Freddo and Chomp are both in there, and most people will spot those quickly. But we've also included some bars that were quietly discontinued at some point — Texan, Bar Six, and Wafer Club all feature, and a tight crop of a discontinued wrapper is harder than you'd think even when you remember the bar well. A clues version is included if you'd rather dial the difficulty back a notch. You can see a full preview on the Etsy listing before you buy. Good for adults who grew up with British sweets and anyone who can still taste a Fudge bar just by thinking about it.
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Mystery Chocolate Bar Wrappers
Your job is to identify twelve UK chocolate bars from cropped, close-up shots of the wrapper. Mars and Kit Kat are both in there, and most people will get those without much trouble. The quiz also includes Topic and Drifter — bars that are still available but tend to live at the back of the confectionery shelf, which makes them harder to recognise from a fragment of packaging than you'd expect. Wispa is also in there, which is a nicer challenge than it sounds once you see how closely cropped the image is. A clues version is included. Head to the Etsy listing for a full preview before you buy. Good for pub quiz food rounds or as part of a sweets-themed evening.
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Mystery UK Chocolate
Twelve UK chocolates and confections in mystery close-up format — this one leans into the more obscure end of the British sweet shelf. Curly Wurly and Penguin are both included, which gives most people a confident start. But the quiz also covers bars that have largely disappeared from shelves: Touch Down, Break Away, Fruit Club, and Mint Cracknel are all in there, and most people will recognise those names without being entirely sure what they looked like up close. Clues version included. Full preview on the Etsy listing before you buy. A good round for anyone who enjoys discussing discontinued British confectionery with strong opinions.
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Mystery US Chocolate Bars
Twelve classic American candy bars to identify from mystery close-up shots of the packaging. Reese's Peanut Butter Cups and Snickers are both in there, and anyone who's visited the US will get those immediately. We've also included 100 Grand, Mr. Goodbar, and Baby Ruth — bars that most British people have heard of but can't always picture clearly — which is exactly where the close-up format does its best work. Kit Kat and Twix also appear in their American packaging versions, which look different enough from the UK to catch people out. Clues version included. Full preview on Etsy. A good option for mixed groups where some players have US connections, or anyone who finds American candy bars more interesting than they expected.
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UK Chocolate Adverts
Twelve classic UK chocolate adverts to identify from a still image. Dairy Milk and KitKat are both in there, and the campaigns for both are so embedded in British television memory that most people will get them quickly. But this quiz also includes Drifter and Time Out — both with their own distinctive campaigns — and Caramel, whose advert is famous enough that you'd think it would be straightforward, until you realise you know the feeling of watching it better than you know the actual frame. Yorkie is also featured. A clues version is included. Full preview on the Etsy listing. A good round for anyone who remembers watching ITV in the 1980s and 90s.
View on EtsyChocolate dingbat quizzes
A dingbat is a picture puzzle where an image — or a combination of images — represents a word or phrase, in this case a UK chocolate bar. So instead of a photograph of the bar, you get a visual pun and have to decode it. Like all our quizzes, dingbats come on a single printed sheet with twelve questions, answer space included, and a full quiz master answer sheet. Most also include a clues version. One of the clues in our chocolate bar dingbat set uses a pen and a bottle of gin — which combine to give you a well-known chocolate biscuit bar — and that's a fair example of how the format works: obvious once it clicks, opaque until it does.
UK Chocolate Bar Dingbats
Each of the twelve questions shows a picture puzzle that represents a UK chocolate bar. Mars and Kit Kat are both in there, though for Kit Kat the clue works via a kite and a cat rather than any image of the bar itself. The quiz also covers Twix, Bounty, and Snickers, each with its own visual logic — some more phonetically stretched than others. One clue involves a pen and a bottle of gin, which gives you a classic chocolate biscuit bar when you put them together — the kind of clue that produces a groan and then an immediate reach for the next question. Clues version included. Full preview on Etsy. A good shout for pub quiz nights that want something more lateral than a standard picture round.
View on EtsyCrisp and snack picture quizzes
Our crisp and snack picture quizzes work the same way as the chocolate picture quizzes above — twelve questions on one sheet, answer space provided, quiz master answer sheet included, and a clues version with most. Where the title includes "Mystery", the photos are close-up crops of the product or packet rather than the full image.
Bar Snacks
Twelve classic British pub snacks to identify from a photograph. Scotch eggs and sausage rolls are both in there, and nobody who has ever stood at a pub bar will struggle with those. But the quiz also includes some of the more divisive options — pickled eggs, pork scratchings, and Twiglets — which, in our experience, produce a strong reaction in either direction regardless of whether anyone can name them from a photo. Chicken wings and mini sausages also feature. A clues version is included. You can see a full preview on the Etsy listing before you buy. Genuinely suited to pub quiz nights, school fetes for adults, or any gathering where the food table features anything from this list.
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Mystery Crisps
Twelve crisps and snacks in mystery close-up format — you're working from a small crop of the actual product rather than the packet. Pringles and Monster Munch are both in there, and the distinctive shapes of both make them fairly manageable. The quiz also includes Space Invaders and Nik Naks, which are crunchier to place from a fragment than their packaging would be. Frazzles are in there too, and the bacon-flavoured shape is either immediately recognisable or something you have to really stare at. Clues version included. Full preview on the Etsy listing. Works particularly well as a pub quiz round where the snack bowl on the table is already doing its own thing.
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Mystery UK Crisp Packets
Twelve classic UK crisp brands to identify from close-up shots of the packet. Monster Munch and Wotsits are in there and should be recognisable to anyone who has spent time near a school tuck shop. The quiz also includes Ringos, Snaps, and Golden Wonder — brands that were more prominent in the 1980s and 90s — alongside Space Raiders, which has a packaging design distinctive enough that you'd expect to spot it straight away, until you see how tight the crop is. Clues version included. Head to the Etsy listing for a full preview. A natural fit for pub quiz nights and events with an audience who grew up with British snacks in the 1980s and 90s.
View on EtsyCrisp and snack dingbat quizzes
Our crisp and snack dingbat quizzes work the same way as the chocolate bar dingbats above — twelve picture puzzles per sheet, answer space included, quiz master answer sheet provided, clues version available with most. If you haven't tried a dingbat quiz before, the chocolate section above has a fuller explanation of how the format works.
Bar Snack Dingbats
Twelve classic pub snacks as picture puzzles. Scotch Eggs, Crisps, and Pork Scratchings are all in there, and the visual logic for each is clear enough that the clues land without much effort. The quiz also includes Pickled Eggs and Pickled Onions, which each require some phonetic gymnastics to crack — "pick" features prominently in both. One clue we're particularly fond of involves a twig and a pair of veterinary surgeons, which sounds completely wrong until you say it out loud. Clues version included. Full preview on the Etsy listing. Works well as a change of pace from standard picture rounds, especially for groups who've already done a few quiz nights together.
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UK Soft Drink Dingbats
Twelve UK soft drinks as picture puzzles. Coca-Cola, Fanta, and Ribena are all in there, and the clues for those are satisfyingly clear once you see them. The quiz also covers Lucozade, Tizer, and Lilt — drinks that were fixtures of British childhood but require a few more lateral steps to decode. One clue we're quietly pleased with involves a Venn diagram and a toe, which somehow adds up to a brand of fizzy drink that was popular long before energy drinks arrived. Clues version included. Full preview on Etsy. A good soft drink round for any quiz night, and one that tends to surprise people who think they know their fizzy drinks inside out.
View on EtsyOther food and snack quizzes
This section covers the formats that don't fit neatly into the picture or dingbat categories: a text-based advert quiz, two anagram rounds for crisps and chocolate bars, a picture advert quiz for soft drinks, and a multiple choice trivia round about British chocolate bar history. The formats vary, but all come as instant PDF downloads with answer sheets included.
Guess the UK Snack Advert
A text-based round: each question describes a classic UK snack or chocolate advert, and you identify the brand. There are 18 questions in the set, which gives the quiz master some flexibility — run the full round or pick the ones that suit your group. Ferrero Rocher and Milk Tray are both in there, and their descriptions are specific enough that anyone who remembers the campaigns will have an immediate moment of recognition. We've also included some that are trickier to pin down from a description alone — a woman enjoying some chocolate in the bath could plausibly be one of several brands if you're not thinking carefully. No clues version for this one. Full preview on the Etsy listing. Works well as a standalone round or mixed into a broader nostalgia quiz night where you want something different from picture rounds.
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UK Crisp Anagrams
Twenty British crisp brands in anagram form — each clue gives you a scrambled version of the brand name alongside a short description hint. Monster Munch and Pringles are both in there, which tend to give the room confidence and get everyone writing. The quiz also includes Roysters, Seabrooks, and Wheat Crunchies, which are considerably harder to unscramble when you're not certain what the answer is. Skips is in there too, and is either a gift or a trap depending on how quickly your brain organises five letters. A clues version is included. Full preview on Etsy. Works well as a team round at pub quiz nights, or as a solo puzzle for anyone who enjoys word games and British snacks in roughly equal measure.
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UK Soft Drink Adverts
Twelve classic UK soft drink adverts to identify from a still image. Tango and Sunny Delight are both in there, and if you grew up watching British television in the 1980s or 90s, both will produce some kind of physical reaction in the memory. The quiz also includes Kia Ora, Um Bongo, and R Whites — adverts with music or characters so specific that people often remember the campaign without being able to name the drink. Quatro is also featured, which is one for anyone who genuinely knows their British soft drinks history. Clues version included. Full preview on Etsy. A good nostalgia round for UK audiences, particularly those who remember Saturday morning television and the adverts that came with it.
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UK Chocolate Bar Anagrams
Twenty UK chocolate bars in anagram form. Each question gives you a scrambled version of the bar name plus a short descriptive hint. Mars, Kit Kat, and Dairy Milk are all in there — familiar enough to land quickly when the letters click into place. The quiz also includes Toffee Crisp, Drifter, and Curly Wurly, which are more satisfying to unscramble precisely because they're less reflexive answers. "Milky Way" appears with a clue about a galaxy, which is either a helpful nudge or a misdirection depending on how you approach it. Clues version included. Head to the Etsy listing for a full preview. Works well as a table activity or as a team round at pub quiz nights with a sweet-toothed crowd.
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UK Chocolate Trivia
A multiple choice trivia quiz covering the history and origins of British chocolate bars. Twelve questions, four options each. The questions go into territory most people haven't thought about: what was Snickers called in the UK before the rebrand, what American bar did the Bounty imitate, what does the name Twix actually stand for. Some of the answers are counterintuitive — the reason Snickers was sold as Marathon in the UK is more entertaining than you'd expect, and the story behind the Curly Wurly's design involves some surplus toffee and a happy accident. A full answer sheet is included with the download. Works well as a standalone round for chocolate enthusiasts, or as a different-format addition to a quiz night already running picture and dingbat rounds.
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