All Classroom Questions and their Answers in Persona 5: The Phantom X (P5X)
Below is a list of classroom questions and answers for Persona 5: The Phantom X (Persona 5: Phantom of the Night, P5X).
Classroom questions, like those in earlier Persona games, typically involve tests of your knowledge on a wide range of topics. In P5X, questions are given out at random whenever you begin your day at school.
If you successfully answer a question, a certain social stat of the Protagonist will be increased.
Note
- Information is based on the game versions that are available in China, Taiwan, and Korea. The global English version has not yet been confirmed or made available, while the Japanese version is presently in the beta stage.
List of Classroom Questions and Answers
Classroom Question | Classroom Answer |
---|---|
“Among those found not guilty in the witch hunt was?” | “Betty Earley” |
“Any triangle is?” | “All triangles” |
“Cavendish was a good scientist, but there was one thing he is never good at?” | “Socializing” |
“Civilization whose name can represent the terrain?” | “Mesopotamian Civilization” |
“Digging up buried gold results to?” | “Only a portion can be taken” |
“Does the Great Wall really have ten thousand miles?” | “According to times” |
“Drinking too much water can cause?” | “Can cause death” |
“Give an example of how mathematics influenced history?” | “Ending wars” |
“How many years did it take to get the answer to the cattle herd problem raised around 250 BC?” | “2,000 Years” |
“In Hobbes’s Social Contract Theory, what will become of humanity without law, without government?” | “War” |
“In a poem by 100 people, the shortest decision is a few words?” | “Yizijue” / “One Word Decision” |
“In order to save Kiyomori, who was suffering from fever, put water on him, and you can reason about what the water has become?” | “Hot water” |
“Internet cables connect the world into a global village, specifically through?” | “Seabed” |
“Say Hundred Million in a different way?” | “100 million” |
“The Nobel Prize is not awarded to?” | “Mathematics” |
“Roman roads were built without the using?” | “Wood” |
“The most popular thing among women during the Tales of Genji is? | “Financial resources” / “Wealth” |
“The most well-known artificial language that helps people around the world communicate?” | “Esperanto” |
“The person who went astray?” | “Ha Zhu” |
“If Confucius, the self-proclaimed fierce god, deeply studied and practiced the basic of divination, is this a contradiction?” | “It’s not a contradiction” |
“Tosa Diary?” | “Male” |
“What did they call dodgeball back in the day? It was a very scary English word?” | “Death ball” / “Ball of Death” |
“What do you think is the meaning of fate compared to destiny: Positive or Negative?” | “Negative” |
“What does it mean to be a redundant? | “Useless” |
“What field is problematic for heliocentrism?” | “Religion” |
“What is common between the Japanese week and the English week is? | “Celestial Bodies” |
“What is special about the ears of an owl?” | “The left and right ear holes are not parallel” |
“What is the most famous cross-media work describing Guo Sheng’s end?” | “Noh drama” |
“What is the solution of taking control of one’s mortality? This discovered by Ignaz Semmelweiss and widely used in contemporary medicine. | “Washing hands and disinfection” |
“The word melancholy originally referred to the secretions of one organ in the human body. Which organ?” | “Liver” (3rd choice) |
“Which of these three words (Abduct, Only, and Never) do you think is related to one? | “Only” |
“Who is the robber who became famous as the Robin Hood of Slovakia?” | “Juraj Janosik” |
“Who is the famous smuggler in France?” | “Louis Mandrin” |
“What does the book say about why we should study?” | “To make money” |
“Why is the honeycomb hexagonal or six-sided? | “Save materials” |
“Why did spices motivate Magellan to circumnavigate the glove?” | “Because it can make money.” |
“What is the origin of the Canary Islands in the Atlantic Ocean? This is another area of misunderstanding.” | “There are a lot of dogs” |
“Where do you think calling beef “beef” comes from?” | “France” |
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