Freerice
Freerice is an ad-supported, free-to-play website and mobile application that allows players to donate rice to families in need by playing a multiple-choice quiz game. For every question the user answers correctly, 10 grains of rice are donated via the United Nation's World Food Programme.
The available categories include Global Goals: Using Facts to Fuel Action, English, Geography, Humanities, Language Learning, Math, and Science. The categories encompass a total of 24 diverse subjects that can be played on up to 5 difficulty levels, depending on the subject. A user's total score is displayed as a mound of rice and number of grains earned.
History
The website went live on October 7, 2007 with 830 grains of rice donated on its first day. The site was created by John Breen, a computer programmer, to help his son study for the SAT exam. The second word in its name was originally capitalized as "FreeRice." On November 20, 2007, the WFP launched a campaign to "feed a child for Thanksgiving," encouraging internet users "to take time out from traditionally the busiest online shopping period of the year and help the hungry" by playing the game. For a brief while, the amount of rice donated per correct answer was increased to 20 grains, though this was reduced to 10 grains of rice per answer within a few months.In March 2009, Breen donated the FreeRice website to the World Food Programme.
Freerice 2.0 launch
In September 2010, the UN World Food Programme launched a new version of the game with social networking, groups, rankings and achievements. As part of the launch, the site dropped the second capitalization in its name, going from "FreeRice" to "Freerice."Freerice Beta Launch
In August 2018, the UN World Food Programme launched a newer, more improved version of the game on a new . The has a new interface and is mobile-friendly. Apps for iOS and Android have also been released with this version of the website.Versions in other languages
In 2011, Freerice launched new language versions of the website in Spanish, French, Italian, Chinese and Korean, allowing users to play the popular game across a number of subjects in their own language for the first time. Freerice China is currently offline, as the World Food Programme has ended its contract with the partner responsible for building and maintaining it.Leaderboards
Freerice users can see the total rice they donated, as well as their current ranking on the site. The website also allows creating groups, of which players can join using a group code. The group score is determined by the total rice donated by the group members while they are a part of the group. The website publicly displays two leaderboards of the top 50 individuals and top 50 groups, along with the scores of each.Effectiveness
In its first ten months of operation, Freerice donated over 42 billion grains of rice. One month after the inception of the viral marketing program, users had earned enough points for one billion grains of rice. The United Nation's World Food Program stated that this amount could feed 50,000 people for one day, since it takes 400 grams or about 19,200 grains of rice to feed one adult for a day. Using this calculation, enough rice was donated in 2008 to feed over 6,000 people daily for each day of that year. Since its inception, as of April 3, 2013, Freerice players had earned sufficient rice for over 10 million meals, assuming 2 meals per day.Awards
- Digital Communications Award 2011 –
- TIME Magazine –
- 15th Annual Webby Awards –
- 2010 Parent's Choice Awards –
- TIME Magazine –
- Yahoo! Pick of the Year 2007 – Charity Category – Winner
- Berkman Award to Freerice.com creator, John Breen. He was recognized with a Berkman Award on May 16, 2008 for creating Freerice.com. At the Harvard University's Berkman Center for Internet & Society's tenth anniversary gala dinner, recipients of the Berkman Awards were chosen for their outstanding contributions to the Internet's impact on society over the past 10 years.
Monthly count
Modified data as of July 31, 2020: 100,275,560,612.
Milestones
- October 7, 2007 – Freerice launches with 830 grains of rice donated on its first day
- November 10, 2007 – Freerice breaks the one-day 100,000,000-grain milestone with 122,377,240 donated grains
- November 28, 2007 – With continued sponsor support, Freerice doubles the number of grains donated for each correct definition from 10 to 20
- December 17, 2007 – Freerice breaks the one-day 300,000,000-grain milestone with 358,559,540 donated grains
- December 19, 2007 – 10 billion grains donated in total
- April 2, 2008 – 25 billion grains donated in total
- November 11, 2008 – 50 billion grains donated in total
- September 2010 – A new version of the game was launched with social networking and group functionality
- January 2011 – 85 billion grains donated in total
- June 2011 – A Spanish version is launched
- September 2011 – A French version and Italian version are launched
- October 2011 – A Chinese version is launched
- December 2011 – A Korean version is launched
- January 2012 – Over 94 billion grains donated in total and over 1 million registered players
- February 2012 – The first official World Freerice Week was held, and two new subjects launched, and soon thereafter deletes millions of grains earned by top participants confused with bots
- April 2012 – Launched an SAT subject
- August 2013 – Reached 100 billion grains of rice
- February 2015 – 300 billion grains donated in total
- August 2018 – Freerice launches their beta website with a fresh new look
- February 2019 – Freerice releases their first rice-raising app on Google Play
- May 2019 – Freerice announces on Facebook they will be shutting down Freerice 2.0 in favor of their beta version
- July 2019 – Freerice releases beta iOS app in the App Store
- August 29, 2019 – Freerice 2.0 shuts down and Freerice Beta takes over
Glitch notes
Freerice glitched in late December 2015, and the yearly total became a negative number, thus subtracting the year's totals from the aggregate total. The problem has reappeared in 2015 and 2016, so the issue appear to be with 32-bit signed binary integers counting the grains. This explains why the displayed total is so much lower than the true total.