Asia-Pacific Quiz Championships

The Asia-Pacific Quiz Championships (AQC) is the premier team quiz event in the Asia-Pacific region.

Asia-Pacific Quiz Championships
SportTrivia
Founded2012 (2012)
Countries6
 Australia
 India
 Malaysia
 New Zealand
 Philippines
 Singapore
Most recent
champion(s)
Singapore (3rd title)
Most titlesSingapore (3 titles)

History

The tournament began in 2012 as the ASEAN Quizzing Championships, an annual quiz competition held among quizzers from ASEAN, primarily those living in Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines. In 2015 the competition expanded to include participants from India and a number of off-site chapters and became the Asian Quizzing Championships (AQC). After teams from the wider Asia-Pacific region such as Australia (from 2017) and New Zealand (from 2018) began participating, the event was renamed the Asia-Pacific Quiz Championships to reflect this wider geographical participation.

The event was founded by Caleb Liu from Singapore and Movin Miranda from India (and a long time resident of Malaysia) with the goal of fostering friendly competition and growing interest in quizzing in the region. The teams are selected by the National Quiz Associations of the respective member countries.

Format

Teams of four compete in three separate rounds, with the highest cumulative score being crowned champions.

  • Round 1 - Individual written round, modelled after the World Quizzing Championships. Participants answer 200 questions worth 1 point each, with 25 questions drawn from each of eight categories:
    • Culture
    • Entertainment
    • History
    • Lifestyle
    • Media
    • Science
    • Sport
    • World

The contribution to the overall team score which will be the cumulative total of the top three individual scores in each of the eight categories (with the lowest score for each category dropped). For example, if the four members of a team scored 15, 15, 15, 7 for Sport, the team score for Sport will be 45. Maximum score = 600 points.

  • Round 2 - Individual Response Round. Participants are asked questions individually in turn. They may answer themselves, or pass the question to a teammate. There is a maximum of three passes per player, once to each teammate. 40 questions (10 per team member), 4 points each. Maximum score = 160 points.
  • Round 3 - Team Discussion Round. Participants work as a team to answer 50 questions worth 5 points each. Maximum score = 250 points.

The maximum team score is therefore 1010 points though in practice teams do not approach that limit.

Participating Teams

Teams Australia India Malaysia New Zealand Singapore Philippines Unaligned TOTAL
2019 3 3 1 0 3 0 0 10
2018 2 1 3 1 1 1 0 9
2017 2 1 2 0 1 2 1 9
2016 0 0 1 0 1 3 1 6
2015 0 1 0 0 1 3 3 8
2014 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 4
2013 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 4
2012 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 4
TOTAL 7 6 10 1 11 12 5 52

Results

Year Venue Gold Points Silver Points Bronze Points
2019 Singapore Singapore 455 Australia 444 Malaysia 420
2018[1] Kuala Lumpur Australia 593 Malaysia 542 Singapore 469
2017[2] Kuala Lumpur India 607 Australia 534 Singapore 518
2016[3] Singapore Malaysia 475 Singapore 474 Singapore B 341
2015 Singapore India 530 Singapore 519 Singapore B 491
2014[4] Manila Singapore 437 Malaysia 396 Philippines 385
2013[5] Singapore Singapore 414 Philippines 396 Malaysia 326
2012 Kuala Lumpur Malaysia 310 Singapore 263 Philippines 216

The current scoring format was adopted in 2017. Up to 2016 there were only 20 questions for each category in the written paper instead of 25. From 2017 onwards, 4 points were awarded in the Individual Response round instead of 5. From 2018 onwards, teams could be awarded half points (i.e. 2 points) in the team round alongside a full point score of 5 points.

Medal Summary

Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
Singapore 3 3 4 10
Malaysia 2 2 2 6
India 2 0 0 2
Australia[6] 1 2 0 3
Philippines 0 1 2 3

Winning Teams


Year Country Team Members
2019 Ravikant Avva, Caleb Liu, Pradeep Ramanathan, Mukund Sridhar
2018 Rick Bakker, Ross Evans, Michael Logue, Aaran Mohann
2017 Anustup Datta, Arun Hiregange, Rajiv Rai, Thejaswi Udupa
2016 G. Krishnamurti, Movin Miranda, Chong MinHow, Jaideep Mukherjee
2015 Gopal Kidao, Rajiv Rai, Jayakanthan Ranganathan, Swami Wathan
2014 Ravikant Avva, Jake Jacobs, Caleb Liu, Rohan Naidu
2013 Caleb Liu, Jake Jacobs, Nirav Kanodra, Iain Carmichael
2012 Neil Bruce, Kee Choonlee, Shiva Gurupatham, Movin Miranda

Highest Individual Scorers

While a team event, the AQC also acknowledges the highest scorers in the first (individual) round.

Year Gold Silver Bronze
2019 Movin Miranda Mehrzaad Mogrelia Michael Logue, Pradeep Ramanathan, Mukund Sridhar (tie)
2018[1] Ross Evans[7] Kelvin Lange Rick Bakker
2017[2] Arun Hiregange Thejaswi Udupa Ravi Avva
2016[3] Movin Miranda[8] G. Krishnamurti Pradeep Ramanathan, Mukund Sridhar (tie)
2015 Rajesh Kannan Sunny Chu Leonardo Gapol
2014 Movin Miranda Leonardo Gapol Caleb Liu
2013 Leonardo Gapol Movin Miranda Caleb Liu
2012 Movin Miranda Caleb Liu Leonardo Gapol

Records

  • Largest Winning Margins
    • India by 73 points (2017)
    • Australia by 51 points (2018)
    • Malaysia by 47 points (2012)
    • Singapore by 41 points (2014)
  • Narrowest Winning Margins
    • Malaysia by 1 point (2016)
    • Singapore by 11 points (2019)
    • India by 11 points (2015)
    • Singapore by 18 points (2013)

Results last updated: 12 August 2019

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References

Official website

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