Can you find the Queen's corgi in the festive scene?

Can you find the Queen’s corgi? Challenge to find Her Majesty’s canine in the festive scene will leave puzzlers scratching their heads!

  • A puzzle has left fans stumped as they try to spot the Queen’s corgi in a crowd
  • In four images, the cheeky dog hides amid a festive scene away for Her Majesty 
  • Made by Yappy, online retailer specialising in Where’s Wally-style dog books 

A ‘Where’s Wally’ style puzzle has left fans stumped as they try to spot the Queen’s corgi in a busy Christmas crowd.   

Yappy, a UK-based online dog retailer have released a series of search and find festive brain-teasers to tackle investigative skills.

In a series of four tricky puzzles, the Queen’s four-legged friend has dashed away is hiding amid a Christmas scene with Buddy the Elf, Father Christmas and bags of presents. So can you spot him?

Scroll down for the solution

PUZZLE 1 

In a series of four tricky puzzles, the Queen’s four-legged friend has dashed away is hiding amid a Christmas scene with Buddy the Elf, Father Christmas and bags of presents

PUZZLE 2 

In the images, the cute Welsh dog cheekily hides amid the Christmas trees, toy soldiers, and festive foods. So can you see him?

PUZZLE 3 

The Queen is known for her love of both dogs and horses, and has owned more than 30 corgis, many of them direct descendants of her first one, Susan – given to her as an 18th birthday present by her parents in 1944

PUZZLE 4

Her final dog, Whisper, who was adopted following the death of his owner, a former Sandringham gamekeeper, died in October 2018. Now she only has dorgis, who are Corgi-Daschund crosses

In the images, the cute Welsh dog cheekily hides amid the Christmas trees, toy soldiers, and festive foods.

The Queen is known for her love of both dogs and horses, and has owned more than 30 corgis, many of them direct descendants of her first one, Susan – given to her as an 18th birthday present by her parents in 1944. 

In the first scene, the corgi is hiding in plain sight, front and centre and tucked behind the snowman.

While the second one head to the back of the scene, to sneak behind the Christmas tree. 

The third corgi is hiding in the back right hand side, tucking himself underway beneath someone going sleighing.

And the last corgi clearly has a desire for some dinner leftovers, hiding underneath the turkey drumstick amid some mince pies. 

ANSWERS 

 1.

ANSWER: The corgi is hiding in plain sight, front and centre and tucked behind the snowman

2. 

ANSWER: The corgi has head to the back of the scene, to sneak behind the Christmas tree

3.

ANSWER: The corgi is hiding in the back right hand side, tucking himself underway beneath someone going sleighing

4

ANSWER: The last corgi clearly has a desire for some dinner leftovers, hiding underneath the turkey drumstick amid some mince pies

The puzzle comes after a viral cartoonist left fans stumped with his latest brainteaser that challenges players to find the only rabbit without a matching pair.  

The puzzle, created by Hungarian artist Gergely Dudas, also known as Dudolf, shows 29 adorable bunnies sitting in five loose rows. 

Each rabbit has a combination of markings on its ears, face and chest, setting them apart from each other. 

The puzzle, created by Hungarian artist Gergely Dudas, also known as Dudolf, shows 29 adorable bunnies sitting in five loose rows. Each rabbit has a combination of markings on its ears, face and chest, setting them apart from each other. But while 14 of the bunnies have a twin, there is one lone rabbit whose markings are totally unique. Can you find it?

But while 14 of the bunnies have a twin, there is one lone rabbit whose markings are totally unique. 

To make things trickier, Dudolf has given the rabbits different facial expressions and added a smattering of accessories to try and distract players from the identifying features. 

His efforts certainly seem to have been successful as dozens of fans took to Facebook to comment just how tricky it was to work out. 

One wrote: ‘This one’s very hard! Ugh. I do enjoy these!’  Another posted: ‘The toughest one yet.’  

Dudolf’s efforts certainly seem to have been successful as dozens of fans took to Facebook to comment just how tricky it was to work out. Sharing the answer, Dudolf revealed the lone bunny is located on the row second from bottom, pictured

Sharing the answer, Dudolf revealed the lone bunny is located on the row second from bottom. 

Describing its markings, one follower said the rabbit looked like ‘Homer Simpson with brown ears’. 

It is the latest in a string of fiendishly tricky puzzles from Dudolf. 

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