Explore well-known brands and the companies behind them, from global tech leaders to iconic consumer names. These quizzes focus on founders, logos, products, headquarters, and major milestones that shaped modern business.
Think you know who really owns the brands you buy every day? This quiz tests your knowledge of parent companies behind popular products, from food and fashion to tech and media. Expect a mix of easy wins and tricky corporate family-tree surprises.
Trace how the world’s biggest tech brands got their start—from garages and dorm rooms to early pivots and first products. This mixed-difficulty quiz focuses on founding stories, original names, and the moments that shaped iconic companies. Pick your question count and difficulty, then test what you really know about tech history.
There are 3 quizzes with 206 questions total.
No. Each quiz has no timer, so you can answer at your own pace.
All questions are multiple choice with 4 options per question.
They cover brands, founders, headquarters, industries, products, logos, and major company milestones.
Yes. Quiz length and difficulty vary across the 3 quizzes, from well-known brands to more detailed corporate history.
These Famous Companies quizzes help you recognize major brands and connect them to founders, core products, industries, and key moments in business history.
You’ll also practice reading brand clues (like slogans, logos, and product lines) and linking them to the right company.
Each question has 4 answer options and there’s no timer, so you can focus on accuracy and learning as you go.
Quiz length and difficulty can vary across the set—some quizzes lean on widely known household names, while others include tougher questions about corporate history, mergers, and lesser-known parent companies.
Many famous companies grew through innovation, branding, and global expansion, but also through acquisitions and rebrands—so the “same” brand name may have different owners over time.
Knowing these connections can make business news easier to follow, especially when headlines mention parent companies, subsidiaries, or major corporate milestones.