The game takes an hour and a half to two hours, and consists of four rounds. Teams, which can be couples out on a date or groups of up to six, have the length of a song to deliberate on their answer and can choose how many points they want to assign to it. If they're confident, for instance, about their knowledge of movies, they might choose to play seven points while they could risk only a single point on a category they're less familiar with.

At the end, it's like Jeopardy, where teams can choose to wager all their points.

"Someone always ends up with zero points at the end of the night," Kerri Mauch said.

Questions focus on movies, sports, television and current events. Occasionally, there are themed events, such as for Christmas and the return of the school year.

QQ Trivia posts schedule of all its events to its Facebook page, and it's always free for players.

"It gives people an option for a night out where they're not spending more than the allotted budget," Kerri Mauch said. "They can eat, drink, and come out to a local business to have a good time. It's a chance to hang out with friends and maybe win a prize."

Breweries give winning teams merchandise or gift cards to share.