Earlier this year, the webcast quest became the new outlet for China's Internet (but all major platforms entered the upgrade and maintenance phase after New Year's Eve). According to the outside world, all major platforms in China imitate the application of HQ from the unusually hot US live broadcasts since the summer of last year. In the live answer, only the right answers to the next question, until the last chance to win a prize. On New Year's Eve, local time (the evening of February 15), a Chinese-related question put by HQ stopped over 90% of foreign respondents. It asks: "What is the official currency of China? RMB, 円, or China yuan?"
Of the 850,000 answerers, only about 70,000 have correctly chosen "renminbi", which is less than one-tenth of the total number. Another nearly 720,000 people voted for the Japanese yen (yen) as "yen", and 60,000 chose "Chinese yuan" that does not exist.
According to Bloomberg News, HQ CEO Rus Yusupov said in a statement that the problem was originally designed as a difficult question. They had previously estimated that one third of the questions were answered incorrectly, but the actual situation Far beyond their imagination. After the issue was thrown out, "RMB" soaring search volume on Google, does not rule out that some people have got the answer from Google within the required 10 seconds to answer the question. In other words, it is possible to know fewer "RMB" respondents.
These are definitely the more precious renminbi even number