Lahore
Pakistan
Pakistan
Customs is a border-desk geography game. A city arrives with a dossier: country, continent, population, elevation, coast, island, river, capital, and other map facts. Your job is to stamp the city Admit or Deny by working out which geography rule is active.
It is a deduction puzzle rather than a memorization quiz. You might know the city, but the run is really about comparing clues: coastal or inland, capital or not, island or mainland, high or low, river city or dry plateau. That makes Customs a good entry point for border geography games and for players who want a geography game without Street View.
New to the border desk? Read the full Customs rules and strategy guide before your next shift.
Customs is built for the same short-session habit as FlightQ's daily geography games: open the desk, read a few city facts, make a run, and compare your score. For dated replayable puzzles, browse the FlightQ archive.
Customs is a geography deduction game where city dossiers arrive at a border desk. You approve or deny each city by inferring the current geography rule from the posted clue.
Read the policy line, inspect the city name, country, continent, population, and map facts, then stamp Admit or Deny. A correct streak moves the shift forward; one wrong stamp ends the run.
Customs uses rules based on real city and country data: capitals, coasts, islands, landlocked countries, rivers, mountains, continents, oceans, population, elevation, and similar map facts.
Customs is built for quick daily play: each visit creates a fresh border-desk shift from real city data, and it sits alongside FlightQ's daily geography games.
Yes. Customs is free in the browser with no account required.