Type | Fate | Answer | % Correct |
---|---|---|---|
Fast Battleship | Scuttled following incapacitating battle damage, 27 May 1941 in the North Atlantic | Bismarck | 94%
|
Fast Battleship | Sunk by Royal Air Force bombers on 12 November 1944 in Tromsø | Tirpitz | 92%
|
Battleship | Sunk at the Battle of North Cape on 26 December 1943 | Scharnhorst | 80%
|
Heavy Cruiser | Towed to Kwajalein Atoll after nuclear weapons test, capsized December 1946 | Prinz Eugen | 79%
|
Heavy Cruiser | Scuttled at the Battle of the River Plate, 17 December 1939 | Admiral Graf Spee | 74%
|
Battleship | Sunk as a blockship in Gotenhafen (Gdynia) on 23 March 1945 and scrapped after the war | Gneisenau | 74%
|
Heavy Cruiser | Scuttled in Kiel, 3 May 1945, raised and scrapped in 1948–1952 | Admiral Hipper | 70%
|
Heavy Cruiser | Sunk as target in the Baltic on 22 July 1947 | Deutschland (Lützow) | 65%
|
Heavy Cruiser | Sunk by Norwegian coastal defence batteries in the Battle of Drøbak Sound on 9 April 1940 | Blücher | 55%
|
Heavy Cruiser | Sunk by British air attack in Kiel on 9 April 1945 | Admiral Scheer | 48%
|
Light Cruiser | Scuttled in Kiel on 3 May 1945, scrapped 1949 | Emden | 42%
|
Light Cruiser | Sunk 10 April 1940 at Bergen, Norway | Königsberg | 42%
|
Light Cruiser | Sunk by American aircraft in Wilhelmshaven on 3 March 1945 | Köln | 41%
|
Light Cruiser | Surrendered 1945. Assigned as a war prize to the Soviet Navy. Scrapped 1960 | Nürnberg | 37%
|
Light Cruiser | Scuttled July 1946 | Leipzig | 36%
|
Battleship | Sunk by bombs in Gotenhagen 1944; scuttled 21 March 1945; raised and beached for long-term use as target 1948; remains still extant. | Schleswig-Holstein | 36%
|
Light Cruiser | Damaged by torpedoes fired by HMS Truant and later sunk on 9 April 1940 | Karlsruhe | 32%
|
Battleship | Mined off Swinemünde in 1945, scrapped 1949–1956 | Schlesien | 26%
|
Battleship | Scrapped between 1944 and 1946 in Bremerhaven | Hannover | 18%
|
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