Popdle Strategy Guide

How to guess country populations in fewer tries using game theory and geography knowledge.

The Core Idea: Binary Search

The fastest way to find an unknown number in a range is to cut the range in half with each guess. Computer scientists call this binary search, and it is provably optimal when all you get back is "higher" or "lower." In Popdle, that is exactly the feedback you receive.

Country populations span a huge range — from around 10,000 (Vatican City, Nauru, Tuvalu) up to roughly 1.4 billion (India, China). But you do not need to search that entire space blindly. Before you type a single digit you already know something about the country, and that prior knowledge lets you start with a much narrower range.

Step-by-Step: The Optimal Guessing Method

Step 1 — Classify the Country

As soon as you see the country name, place it in a rough size bucket. Think about its continent, its physical area, and whether you associate it with a large or small population. You do not need to be precise yet — just pick a plausible range.

Example: The country is Colombia. You know it is a large South American country — not as big as Brazil, but clearly a major nation. A reasonable starting range might be 30 to 80 million.

Step 2 — Guess the Midpoint

Take the middle of your range. For Colombia you might guess 55 million. If the answer is "lower," your new range is 30–55 million. If "higher," it is 55–80 million. Either way you have eliminated roughly half the possibilities.

Step 3 — Halve Again

Repeat the process. If Popdle said "lower" after 55 million, guess about 42 million next. After two rounds of halving, your range is typically narrow enough that you are already within 25% (orange zone) or 10% (yellow zone).

Step 4 — Fine-Tune

Once you are in the yellow or green zone, small adjustments are all you need. At this stage, think about whether you are slightly above or below and adjust by a few million (or a few hundred thousand for smaller nations).

Key insight: With pure binary search on a range of 1 to 1,400 million, you would need about 10–11 halvings to reach 5% accuracy. But because you already have geographic knowledge to narrow the starting range, 4–5 guesses is usually enough.

Information Theory: Making Every Guess Count

In information theory, each yes/no answer gives you exactly one bit of information. The more bits you collect, the faster you zero in on the answer. A guess of "1 million" against a country that obviously has 200 million people wastes your guess — you already knew the answer was higher, so you gain zero useful information.

The ideal guess is one where you consider both outcomes equally likely. If you genuinely think a country has between 20 and 60 million people, guessing 40 million is better than guessing 25 million, because 40 million splits your uncertainty evenly. This is the principle of maximum entropy reduction — each guess should eliminate as much uncertainty as possible.

Population Reference Table

Memorizing a handful of anchor populations gives you starting points for comparison. Here are some useful benchmarks organized by region:

RegionCountryPopulation (approx.)
AsiaIndia1,430 million
AsiaChina1,410 million
AsiaIndonesia275 million
AsiaJapan124 million
AsiaPhilippines115 million
AmericasUnited States335 million
AmericasBrazil215 million
AmericasMexico130 million
AmericasColombia52 million
AmericasArgentina46 million
EuropeGermany84 million
EuropeFrance68 million
EuropeUnited Kingdom67 million
EuropeItaly59 million
EuropeSpain48 million
AfricaNigeria220 million
AfricaEthiopia125 million
AfricaEgypt105 million
AfricaDR Congo100 million
AfricaSouth Africa60 million
OceaniaAustralia26 million
OceaniaNew Zealand5 million
Comparison trick: If you know France has about 68 million people and the country you are guessing is a neighboring European nation about half its size, start around 30–35 million. You can often estimate a country you have never studied by comparing it to one you know.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Starting Too Low

New players often guess 1 million or 2 million as a safe starting point. But most countries have populations well above 10 million, so this guess wastes a turn telling you something you could have figured out from context. Start higher unless you are confident the country is very small.

Ignoring the Percentage Math

The win condition is within 5%, which means the absolute size of your acceptable error scales with the country. For a country of 100 million, you need to be within 5 million. For a country of 1 million, you need to be within 50,000. This means small countries require more precise guessing in absolute terms, even though the percentage target is the same.

Not Adjusting Enough After Feedback

If your guess is in the red zone ("Very Far," more than 25% off), you need a big adjustment — not a small one. A common trap is guessing 50 million, getting "Very Far / higher," and then guessing 55 million. That five-million jump is only a 10% change, which is unlikely to get you out of the red. You should be doubling or halving, not nudging.

Advanced: The Math Behind Optimal Play

Suppose you know the population lies somewhere between L (low) and H (high). A perfect binary search narrows this to a range of (H−L)/2n after n guesses. You win when that remaining range is smaller than 10% of the true population (5% above and 5% below).

For a country with a population of P, you need (H−L)/2n ≤ 0.10 × P. Rearranging: n ≥ log2((H−L) / (0.10 × P)). If your initial range is 200 million wide and the true population is 80 million, you need at least log2(200/8) ≈ 4.6 guesses — so five guesses with good binary search should do it, leaving one guess as a safety margin.

The takeaway: the tighter your initial range estimate, the fewer guesses you need. This is why geographic knowledge is so powerful — it shrinks your starting range before you even begin.

Practice Makes Perfect

After finishing the daily Popdle puzzle, use practice mode to drill countries you find difficult. Over time you will build a mental map of population sizes across the world. Many players find that after a few weeks of daily play, they can guess most countries in two or three tries.

Popdle uses live data from the World Bank and Wikidata, so you are always working with current figures — a good way to stay up to date on how the world is changing.

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