Some tips for India: 1. Letters with line on top -> Hindi -> Northern India, Hindi-ish script but no line on the top -> Gujarat 2. Letters with curves and looks squiggly -> Dravidian/Southern languages, vertical lines and dots -> Tamil -> can only be Chennai (due to limited coverage), more curved but with tick on the top -> Telugu -> anywhere in Andhra Pradesh, otherwise Karnataka (trust me its very tough to distinguish Kannada and Telugu even for Indians who dont know the languages) 3. If you can find any English in the signs -> mostly urban place, can't find English signs -> remote place 4. High altitude railway -> must be near Shimla in the north 5. Winter clothes are wore only in the north for in the south it always remains hot 6. Tall towered, pyramid like temples -> south India, forts -> mostly in the north 7. Coconut palms, surrounding hills, black soil -> south or central India. plains with agricultural fields, brown soil -> North 8. Auto/tuktuk colours: Black and yellow - Mumbai, Green and yellow - Gujarat, Yellow - Chennai
Black and Yellow tuktuks are for the entire state of Maharashtra not just Mumbai which is a city in Maharashtra. Also the line at the top of letters also applies for Marathi language which is the language of Maharashtra. Hindi, Marathi and other Northern Indian languages follow the Devanagari script which have the top line.
India doesn't actually has a hindu region or a separate region for separate religions. All religions are spread throughout the India. You'll find Hindu architecture everywhere in India cause it's the dominant religion.
You could have guessed the first one by the clothes because in the north we get cold winter and they wear warm clothes. South India doesn't get the winter season. These simple things will help you a lot in India.
@@himanshugurjar9002 Maybe for them but still most people from other countries know India as a sub-tropical hot country(which it is for the most part) if anyone is wearing a few warm clothes it indicates the area will be around the north where the average temperature will be around 10°-15°C (50°-59°F) during winter. It is just one of many tips for playing in India. Yes, it will not work all the time but still it helps.
Tips to find india: 1: if you see the hindi based alphabet it will mostly be the northern part 2: if you spot some pine trees in a sunny surrounding it will most likely be the southern part
English is everywhere in India. It is the 2nd most spoken language in India and everywhere you go not only just tourist spots, like everywhere its mostly written in english the signs, shop boards, etc. even in rural areas u can find some english. The state that i live in (kerala) is mostly english. So, you can get wrong if ur gonna use this as a strat for finding places
The english is for indians as well. As India has so many languages, different states don't understand each other's language either. So they read english. It's how all different indian states communicate
India has in the past 20 years slowly changed some colonial names back to their original names Bangaluru was called Bangalore. Calcutta is now Kolkata just for a couple examples. It does increase the difficulty!!! Mumbai was Bombay as well. Good luck
good suggestion is to always look at tuk tuk/ trucks number plates , as they are not always traditionally at the front and back, some times on the side, and sometimes in some fancy fonts so its not blurred
Thank you for playing the map. Even i cant read any of the languages spoken here apart from 4-5 so youre not alone in that😂 most of the locations are famous places only but some of those famous places are really obscure ones. Like i havent heard of the man singh palace before but its there. This is why its hard even for me to get good score here.
im from india and im from a relatively smaller city of Chandigarh, and somehow my first spawn on the india playlist was like a kilometer or 2 away from my house and it freaked me the fuck out lmao
in august there should be duels or battle royale sesions between all of you, the great geoguessr youtubers... i wanna se something interesting: tabitha, zigzag, chicago, geopeter and of course geowizard, i would pay to see that live or at least recorded. you rock! think about that.
Love the videos, would love if you did my local town Leicester, it dosent come up on geoguessr that often despite it being a relatively big area in the uk, keep up the good work!!
very fun map! i'm indian myself and can differentiate between most languages (reading is another question lol) so i ended up with 20690. no clue where that telugu round was which messed me up
15816. r1 jebaited by New Delhi on a sign. r2 I FORGOT I COULD MOVE. r3 found Gwalior sign. Remembered that Gwalior's a big city and found it. (5k) r4 didn't find any clues apart from the language. Guessed Bangalore. r5 saw HP on licence plate, zoomed in and found town. (5k)
Some tips for India:
1. Letters with line on top -> Hindi -> Northern India, Hindi-ish script but no line on the top -> Gujarat
2. Letters with curves and looks squiggly -> Dravidian/Southern languages, vertical lines and dots -> Tamil -> can only be Chennai (due to limited coverage), more curved but with tick on the top -> Telugu -> anywhere in Andhra Pradesh, otherwise Karnataka (trust me its very tough to distinguish Kannada and Telugu even for Indians who dont know the languages)
3. If you can find any English in the signs -> mostly urban place, can't find English signs -> remote place
4. High altitude railway -> must be near Shimla in the north
5. Winter clothes are wore only in the north for in the south it always remains hot
6. Tall towered, pyramid like temples -> south India, forts -> mostly in the north
7. Coconut palms, surrounding hills, black soil -> south or central India. plains with agricultural fields, brown soil -> North
8. Auto/tuktuk colours: Black and yellow - Mumbai, Green and yellow - Gujarat, Yellow - Chennai
Black and Yellow tuktuks are for the entire state of Maharashtra not just Mumbai which is a city in Maharashtra.
Also the line at the top of letters also applies for Marathi language which is the language of Maharashtra. Hindi, Marathi and other Northern Indian languages follow the Devanagari script which have the top line.
India doesn't actually has a hindu region or a separate region for separate religions. All religions are spread throughout the India. You'll find Hindu architecture everywhere in India cause it's the dominant religion.
More fair to say it is the native culture
You could have guessed the first one by the clothes because in the north we get cold winter and they wear warm clothes. South India doesn't get the winter season. These simple things will help you a lot in India.
Cold for indian standards. Its probably pleasant for them
@@himanshugurjar9002 Maybe for them but still most people from other countries know India as a sub-tropical hot country(which it is for the most part) if anyone is wearing a few warm clothes it indicates the area will be around the north where the average temperature will be around 10°-15°C (50°-59°F) during winter. It is just one of many tips for playing in India. Yes, it will not work all the time but still it helps.
@@himanshugurjar9002 no bro… i live in canada but come to india in winter and we feel cold here in Gujarat
@@akp3097 Canadian homes r insulated and with heating system.
@@himanshugurjar9002 bro we don’t spend whole day in home and starting of winter is like 0-5 temp. So it’s like 10-15 of india
6:13 Actually, it is due to Indian laws that these license plates are blurred, to ensure the right to privacy
15:20 Actually, majority of India is Hindu. So Hinduism doesn't give much clues regarding the regions.
Tips to find india:
1: if you see the hindi based alphabet it will mostly be the northern part
2: if you spot some pine trees in a sunny surrounding it will most likely be the southern part
Pine or palm?
English is everywhere in India. It is the 2nd most spoken language in India and everywhere you go not only just tourist spots, like everywhere its mostly written in english the signs, shop boards, etc. even in rural areas u can find some english. The state that i live in (kerala) is mostly english. So, you can get wrong if ur gonna use this as a strat for finding places
The english is for indians as well. As India has so many languages, different states don't understand each other's language either. So they read english. It's how all different indian states communicate
India has in the past 20 years slowly changed some colonial names back to their original names Bangaluru was called Bangalore. Calcutta is now Kolkata just for a couple examples. It does increase the difficulty!!! Mumbai was Bombay as well. Good luck
7:37 to 13:09 was painful to watch as an RCB fan.
First image: it's flat brown soil probably a university because there were hostels, dry and sunny that's pretty much north india
12:29 this is chinaswamy Stadium 🏟 very famous home Stadium for rcb team
It's only going to get harder with more coverage in India. 😂😂
I would enjoy seeing you try France, my home country.
Good job btw, India is for sure difficult with its coverage and languages !
Thank you! I’ll give France a go soon :))
Being a Indian I can say the 1st one was really hard for me too.
Yeah but seeing the weather and the greenery/trees my mind was going towards Punjab/delhi
good suggestion is to always look at tuk tuk/ trucks number plates , as they are not always traditionally at the front and back, some times on the side, and sometimes in some fancy fonts so its not blurred
thank you!!
You did a great job
thank you!
Thank you for playing the map. Even i cant read any of the languages spoken here apart from 4-5 so youre not alone in that😂 most of the locations are famous places only but some of those famous places are really obscure ones. Like i havent heard of the man singh palace before but its there. This is why its hard even for me to get good score here.
I hope you enjoyed! Sorry again for my terrible knowledge of India 😂
@@tabithawilson8819 its ok dw even india is so big and diverse that nobody has good knowledge about the whole country 😂
you're from Howrah pal
@@arbabasukalsar4361 i spend half my day in kolkata so it counts
im from india and im from a relatively smaller city of Chandigarh, and somehow my first spawn on the india playlist was like a kilometer or 2 away from my house and it freaked me the fuck out lmao
in august there should be duels or battle royale sesions between all of you, the great geoguessr youtubers... i wanna se something interesting: tabitha, zigzag, chicago, geopeter and of course geowizard, i would pay to see that live or at least recorded. you rock! think about that.
that would be super cool but they’re definitely all a lot better than me!!
Just amazing ngl. Very well done!
thank you!!
India comes number two after USA in English speaking population.
I enjoyed it! Also you are so sweet
Love the videos, would love if you did my local town Leicester, it dosent come up on geoguessr that often despite it being a relatively big area in the uk, keep up the good work!!
thanks! will add it to my list :))
Had fun watching! play more of India once the coverage increases
very fun map! i'm indian myself and can differentiate between most languages (reading is another question lol) so i ended up with 20690. no clue where that telugu round was which messed me up
Please look for official India map .. Google released street view for India
Gg 😀❤️
Very nice try 👍❤️
i like how they don't use google search .
1st one I legit think Hyderabad University 😭
You do amazing analysis... you just need to know India a little.
15816. r1 jebaited by New Delhi on a sign. r2 I FORGOT I COULD MOVE. r3 found Gwalior sign. Remembered that Gwalior's a big city and found it. (5k) r4 didn't find any clues apart from the language. Guessed Bangalore. r5 saw HP on licence plate, zoomed in and found town. (5k)
Good try
English does not mean touristy area haha, English is everywhere
you should try washingotn state! thats where I'm from
And California ;=))