Ferrari deliberately produces fewer cars than demand requires — limiting output to roughly 14,000 per year so the brand stays exclusive even as wealth has exploded globally. This quiz covers Enzo's legacy, the prancing horse origin, F1 dominance, and every legendary halo car from the 250 GTO to the LaFerrari.
Each round presents 10 randomized questions from a pool of 50, with four multiple-choice options and instant feedback after every answer. Your final score comes with a performance tier and shareable results.
You'll explore Ferrari's 1939 founding by Enzo Ferrari, the prancing horse logo from WWI ace Francesco Baracca, generations of road cars from the 250 GTO to the F40 to the LaFerrari and the new Purosangue, the supercar special series, F1 history with Schumacher's five-title run, and Le Mans wins from Phil Hill's 1960s era to the 499P Hypercar.
Enzo Ferrari (1898-1988) founded the company in 1939 in Modena, Italy. Production cars began in 1947 with the 125 S after Enzo broke from Alfa Romeo, where he had run the racing program.
The 250 GTO — only 39 made between 1962 and 1964 — has sold for over $70 million, the most ever paid for a car at public auction (and even more privately).
Ferrari has won 16 Constructors' Championships and 15 Drivers' Championships, including Michael Schumacher's run of five consecutive titles from 2000 to 2004.
Last updated: May 2026