Germany is the best country in the world for almost everything, according to a new survey.
USA News ranked 60 countries based on a number of attributes voted on by 16,000 people.
These included heritage, business and the economy, quality of life and culture.
Germany ranked top for entrepreneurship, but Germans are seen to lack adventure, as the nation only hit 45th place in that category. Happy-go-lucky Brazilians were voted the most adventurous nation.
Canada took second place first place for quality of life, taking second for citizenship, third for being open for business and fifth for entrepreneurship.
Best and worst countries
Britain grabbed third place, hitting the top 10 for citizenship, culture, entrepreneurship, quality of life and global influence.
The USA came fourth, hitting the top ranking for global influence, culture and entrepreneurship.
Sweden was fifth, taking first place for citizenship and second for business and quality of life. The other top 10 place was sixth for entrepreneurship.
The worst countries, starting with the lowest place of 60th, were Algeria, The Ukraine, Iran, Nigeria and Pakistan.
USA News also splits the data into some strange categories – such as the top 10 most musical countries and the 10 countries that eat the most chocolate.
For the curious, the top musical countries are the USA, Germany (yes, seriously) and Britain.
Music and chocolate
For chocolate lovers, the places to go are Switzerland, where each person munches through 18 pounds of the confectionery each year; Germany, where everyone eats around 16 pounds of chocolate each year and Austria, where everyone scoffs a 15.7-pound mound of chocolate every year.
These surveys put Germany in the top three as best country, most musical and as one of the largest consumers of chocolate.
The firm also lists the countries perceived as the most corrupt.
Nigeria tops the list, followed by Colombia, Iran, Pakistan, Mexico, Russia, Algeria, Egypt, Kazakhstan and Bolivia.
One observation is the correlation between the worst countries to live and those considered most corrupt is very similar.
“Corruption is still prevalent in many developed nations,” said a USA News spokesman.
“We left people to make up their own minds about what corruption meant to them, as the term means different things to different people.”