anewman wrote:I guess the way I see it is for example you play one game - you get a question wrong and it pops up the correct answer. If you see the question again you are more likely to remember the correct answer just because you have seen the question before.
That is one of the key points actually. Personally I would find myself much more likely to remember something because I got it wrong on a game rather than if I'd seen it as one question and answer pair in a long list. Seeing it in the game gives it a context that reading it off a list doesn't.
I am by no means an expert on the science of memory and learning but context seems to me to be a huge part of the process. To take your simple example of who won the Ashes in 2005, most of us would know the answer anyway because we can recall the matches themselves, the excitement of seeing England win, the celebrations afterwards and so on. If however I sat down to try to learn a list of who won the Ashes each year it was played in the 1910s I would find it a lot harder because there is no context to place each fact against.
A couple of other points:
(1) question sets and more importantly games do change. If you are going to try this approach you have to be able to deal with the potential disappointment of taking two months trying to learn say 10,000 questions for Deal or No Deal only to find it removed from all the machines the next time you go to the pub!
(2) most games do NOT show you the correct answer when you get a question wrong. For Millionaire you might have to get the same question four times before you knew what the right answer was
I don't want to completely discourage you or anyone else trying this but like I said, if you genuinely have the ability to learn in this way, you should really be out there playing the games rather than spending hours in front of a long list of facts.