A couple of times, I've gotten the main street in Dawson City, Yukon. The first time, I thought it was Russia, given the age and architectural style of the building. Now I know exactly where Dawson City is.
I guess this site just fired up - last week, when I first found it, there were something like 12,000 Facebook likes. I noticed it was going up, and on Saturday, pointed out to my wife that they were up to 54,000. Today, it's up 104,000. Kind of fascinating to watch.
Edit: OK, yeah, looks like it blew up this weekend. There's a lot of coverage that came out today on it, including this little tidbit that describes exactly how I feel about it:
Rock, Paper, Shotgun wrote:
If you weren’t connected to the correct Twitter tubes this weekend, there’s a chance you may not have spent every waking moment playing GeoGuessr. So let’s put that right now.
Anton Wallén’s clever repurposing of Google’s Street View magics dumps you in the middle of somewhere, and you have to try to figure out where that is. You can move around in Street View as you might expect, but obviously you can’t zoom out to see the map you’re in. Once you’ve wandered about, hunted down clues to a location, and feel pretty sure of where you are, you drop a pin somewhere in the world on the map top right, and you score points based on how close you were. And then you keep doing that until you’ve forgotten to go to bed tomorrow night.
Or, this:
Quote:
And those desert roads can often lead to a wild guess, sometimes tens of thousands of kilometres out as it turns out that yet again this stretch of Nevada is in the West of Australia.
Second edit: Sheesh, and here I thought my 13000-point score was pretty good.
Last edit: OK, I think this is the best I can do - I went all out and summoned up all of my Google-fu and research skills. Roadside signs in Hawaii and the Czech Republic really helped the cause:
31847 points, nothing more than a few hundred meters away for any of them. Kind of fun, but it really did kill my afternoon.