If you ask ten people how many countries there are, you will get at least four different answers: 193, 195, 196, or 197. None of them is wrong. They just count different things. This article explains what each number means and walks through every continent's tally.
There are 193 full member states of the United Nations, plus 2 UN observer states (Vatican City and Palestine), for a practical total of 195 countries. GuessGlobe uses 195 as its canonical list, because that is what most atlases, school curricula, and international sports federations use too.
The number 196 usually adds Taiwan, which the UN does not recognise but which functions as an independent country in virtually every practical sense. The number 197 might include Kosovo, which is recognised by about 100 UN members but not by the UN itself. Go further and you can reach 204, 206, or higher depending on how liberally you count partially-recognised states and claimed territories.
The UN was founded in 1945 with 51 original members, and has grown with every wave of decolonisation and state dissolution since. When a territory meets the three international-law criteria for statehood — defined territory, permanent population, and effective government — and is accepted by a two-thirds majority of the General Assembly after a Security Council recommendation, it becomes a UN member. This is slow, political, and imperfect, but it is also the closest thing the world has to a single official "list of countries."
The 2 observer states — Vatican City (the Holy See, since 1964) and Palestine (since 2012) — sit in UN sessions and can speak but cannot vote. Most countries recognise both as sovereign, so they are included in the GuessGlobe list.
Africa has more countries than any other continent. The 54 figure is the standard count and matches African Union membership (which also recognises a 55th member, Western Sahara, a disputed territory in the west). The continent's population is 1.4 billion, roughly one in six people alive today. It breaks down into five UN geographic regions: Northern Africa, Western Africa, Middle Africa, Eastern Africa, Southern Africa.
Common pitfalls on quizzes:
Asia has the world's largest and second-largest populations (China and India) and the world's most diverse geographic profile — from Siberian tundra to tropical archipelagos. The UN counts 48 Asian countries; some classifications list 49 or 50 depending on whether you treat Russia (which spans two continents) as Asian or European, and whether you include Taiwan.
Sub-regional breakdown:
Europe's country count is the most politically debated. The UN's geoscheme lists 44; some organisations count up to 51 by including transcontinental states (Russia, Turkey, Cyprus, the Caucasus trio). In GuessGlobe we follow the mainstream atlas convention: 44 European countries, with Russia and Turkey counted in Asia.
A few regional sub-groupings worth knowing:
*Kosovo's status is partially recognised; the UN does not list it as a member state.
The Americas are usually split into North, Central, South, and the Caribbean:
Note that many Caribbean islands are still territories of the UK, France, the Netherlands, or the US (Puerto Rico, Martinique, Aruba, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, and so on). They are not independent countries, so they are not in our list.
Oceania is the smallest region by country count, but it covers a third of the planet's surface if you include the Pacific Ocean:
Some lists include a 15th — New Zealand's free-associated states of the Cook Islands and Niue, which have partial sovereignty. They are not UN members and are not in our main quiz.
Russia spans two continents — Europe west of the Urals, Asia east — but the UN geoscheme assigns it to Eastern Europe. Turkey sits in Western Asia but is often grouped with Europe politically. We follow the UN convention so that our total is exactly 195.
The following are not in GuessGlobe's main quiz but are worth knowing about:
Africa 54 + Asia 48 + Europe 44 + Americas 35 + Oceania 14 = 195. That is the list GuessGlobe asks you to master. When you feel ready, start Classic mode and see how many of the 195 you can place in ten questions. When you reach 90% accuracy, try the Countries Challenge and go through all 195 in a single sitting.
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