PDD Geoguessr #10: Northern Minnesota in Atlas Obscura

Devil’s Kettle, a location featured in Atlas Obscura. Photo by the author.

This challenge provides the opportunity to go on a road trip without leaving the warmth of your house. Billing itself as “the definitive guide to the world’s hidden wonders,” the website Atlas Obscura lists user-supplied travel destinations that the standard guidebooks usually omit. The site focuses in particular on unusual museums, folk art, natural wonders and memorials to otherwise forgotten history.

Choosing five of the dozen or so options in northern Minnesota (with northern Minnesota being defined as any location at or above Highway 2) was difficult. Some places, like the only gas station ever designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, seemed too obvious.

Cloquet’s Frank Lloyd Wright gas station probably is in most guidebooks

Others, like The Lost 40 — an area filled with 300-year-old trees saved from logging by a mapping error — I had never heard of, but made for poor rounds because the location provided no clues that allowed for a reasonable guess. Val’s Rapid Service and the Judy Garland Museum are both interesting places with poor visibility from the Google Streetview car.

In the end, I chose three Streetview locations and two photospheres. The photospheres should have enough clues in them to get pretty close to the exact location, if you look carefully. If you want to learn more about the background of any the selected locations, you can look them up by city on the Atlas Obscura website.

Each round has a time limit of 5 minutes. As always, a detailed explanation of how to play Geoguessr follows the game link below:

PDD Geoguessr #9: Northern Minnesota in Atlas Obscura

How to Play Geoguessr

GeoGuessr can be played on a laptop or desktop and on Android or IoS mobile devices with the GeoGuessr app. Just click on the link that fits how you play and create an account to start playing.

Every game consists of five locations based on a theme chosen by the game creator. You are shown a Streetview image stripped of all the informational labels that are normally overlayed onto the image. Unless the challenge specifically restricts it, you can move around and look for clues like street signs and business names to find out where you are. The image below shows a basic overview of the Geoguessr screen layout and controls.

Once you think you know the location — or are nearly out of time — you use the inset map to place your marker where you believe the round started. After you hit “Guess,” you will see how close you were to the correct location and how many points your guess earned. The closer you are to the location, the higher your score, with a maximum score of 5,000 points. On a map that covers a small area, like the Gary-New Duluth neighborhood, being off by a few blocks will cost you a lot of points. On a map that has locations from around the world, you will get nearly all the points just for finding the right city. The maximum error for a perfect score also changes by map size, but in general if you are within 50 feet (15 meters) you will always get the full 5,000 points.

Not often, but every now and then, GeoGuessr gets a little buggy. If the underlying Streetview imagery has changed since the game was made, sometimes it repeats the last round, gives a black screen, or doesn’t allow a guess to be made. If that happens, please let me know and I’ll update the challenge.

At the end of the five rounds, an overview screen shows your score for each round in addition to your guessing time and how far off you were from the correct location. The correct locations and your guesses are also shown on a map and you can click on any of the round numbers to review the locations. Additionally, the final screen in a challenge will show how you rank compared to the top scorers of the challenge. When choosing your user name, keep in mind that your user name and score per round will be visible to other players of the challenge.

If you have feedback on this challenge or ideas for future challenges, please share them in the comments below.

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