The annual brainteaser aims to tickle the neurons of those hoping to work in intelligence, and comes in the form of a Christmas card, sent by the national spy agency's director Anne Keast-Butler. To ...
Latin dancing, Indian butter and American soldiers are some of the clues for this year's cryptic Christmas challenge set by the national spy agency. GCHQ's annual brainteaser comes in the form of a ...
Still scratching your head over the GCHQ Christmas challenge ... The first - and easiest - question features five images, representing a place name. Susan Okereke, a maths teacher who has written ...
GCHQ's annual brainteaser comes in the form of ... The first - and easiest - challenge features five images, representing a place name. Quizzers are asked to decipher the location.
If so, keep scrolling to see how you've scored on this year's GCHQ Christmas Quiz. Question 1: Buckingham Palace (the images display 'buck', 'king', 'ham' followed by 'pal' and 'ace', which put ...
GCHQ's Chief Puzzler, known only as "Colin", described this year's tests as "fiendishly enjoyable". The first – and easiest – challenge features five images, representing a place name.
GCHQ's Chief Puzzler, known only as "Colin", described this year's tests as "fiendishly enjoyable". The first – and easiest – challenge features five images, representing a place name. Quizzers are ...
If so, keep scrolling to see how you've scored on this year's GCHQ Christmas Quiz. Question 1: Buckingham Palace (the images display 'buck', 'king', 'ham' followed by 'pal' and 'ace', which put ...
Each of the seven puzzles have been masterminded by puzzle experts at GCHQ, Britain's signals intelligence agency. For the first time, this year, there are three additional hidden elements in the ...