
Picture Credit: Netflix
While the gaming and entertainment industries closely watch Netflix’s billion-dollar push into high-end mobile ports and TV-based party games, one of their biggest success stories is happening quietly every weeknight. Best Guess Live, an interactive trivia app that launched on December 8, 2025, has become a daily habit for a massive audience—and the numbers prove it.
Despite the game currently being geo-locked to players in the United States, it consistently ranks among the top 10 most-played games on the daily Netflix charts, which measure playtime. That, in addition to its hundreds of thousands of downloads, and of course, the massive prize pot that’s been awarded to players.
This level of engagement points to an incredibly high daily retention rate. By offering real money and requiring players to tune in live at a specific time (5 PM PST / 8 PM EST), Netflix has successfully recreated the “appointment viewing” of traditional television within a modern mobile game.
The Fan Archive: Tracking the Millions
Because Netflix is notoriously guarded with its internal metrics, the community has taken data tracking into its own hands. The Best Guess Archive, created by Jeremy Bean, who also uses the username KindaCharming, is a fan-created database that meticulously logs every episode, clue, and payout. It even lets you replay previous games, akin to the NY Times games section!
Note: Because this is a fan-led passion project, there may be slight variances in the exact figures compared to Netflix’s official ledger. However, it provides an incredible public snapshot of the game’s massive scale. Data pulled on April 17th.
According to the archive’s deep dive, here is the macro-level view of what the game has accomplished:
- Total Prize Money Paid Out: $2,544,998.
- Total Winners: 46,499 players have successfully taken home a piece of the pot.
- Games Archived: The database currently tracks 93 distinct games, encompassing 186 total rounds of play.
- Total Guesses: A staggering 7,631,386 total guesses have been submitted by the player base.
- Total Correct Guesses: Out of those millions of attempts, players have guessed the secret item correctly 1,434,753 times across all clues.
The Daily Stakes: Averages and Extremes
While the total payout of over $2.5 million is staggering, the episode-to-episode breakdown reveals why players keep coming back every single day. The tension of the game lies in its unpredictability.
- The Average Nightly Pot: Across the archived episodes, the average prize pot sits at an enticing $13,683.
- The Record-Breaking Pot: The highest single pot recorded in the archive was a jaw-dropping $300,000 on Friday, December 26, 2025, for the secret item “ICE CUBE TRAY”.
- Most Guessed Episode: Overall engagement peaked during the “7-ELEVEN” episode on New Year’s Eve 2025, drawing an unbelievable 93,211 guesses in a single game.
The Skill Gap: Solo Victories vs. Mass Splits
Best Guess Live creates brilliant tension by pitting the speed of the individual against the wisdom of the crowd. The faster you guess, the less you have to share—if you’re right.
- Solo Wins (The Holy Grail): In 45 games (roughly 24% of the archive), exactly one player guessed correctly early enough to take the entire pot for themselves.
- The Easiest Split: On the opposite end of the spectrum, the “easiest” game logged was “BINGO” on April 7, 2026, where a massive 9,645 winners flooded the servers and had to split the prize pool.
- The Hardest Secret Item: The ultimate stump-the-audience moment came on January 1, 2026, with the secret item “KENTUCKY DERBY”. Only 2 out of 31,361 total guesses were correct—a microscopic 0.006% overall success rate.
- The Hardest Single Clue: During the April 15, 2026, game for the item “YODA,” exactly 0 out of 3,715 players guessed correctly on Clue 1, resulting in a 0.000% success rate for that specific round.
The data also reveals a fascinating trend about the player base’s trivia prowess: they don’t wait around. The game heavily incentivizes early risk-taking.
- Clue 1 Dominance: More than half of all recorded games—113 games (61%)—are decided on the very first clue.
- The Host Effect: The archive tracks performance across different hosts, noting that mainstays like Hunter March (who hosted 119 games in the archive’s records) see 58% of his games won on Clue 1, while Howie Mandel (56 games) sees 63% of his games won on the first clue.
With the recent launch of “New Rules” (which splits payouts into Gold, Silver, and Bronze tiers to reward slightly slower but still correct players), the platform is actively iterating on its formula. It’s a quiet success, but for the tens of thousands of players winning real cash, it’s one of the most interesting titles right now in Netflix’s gaming lineup, which has changed massively since it first launched in late 2021.
The game really reminds me of the early efforts on Xbox 360 with Xbox Live, specifically its 1 vs. 100 effort, or, if you want to get a little more recent, HQ, which ran in the late 2010s and into the early 2020s, though it eventually shut down.
Have you won on Best Guess Live yet? Let us know in the comments.

