WNBA All-Star Scavenger Hunt comes to South Bend and Warsaw

SOUTH BEND, Ind. -- The WNBA All-Star Game is heading to Indianapolis next weekend but fans across the state are getting involved in a different way.

The WNBA All-Star Scavenger Hunt is on the move, making 20 stops in 17 cities across Indiana and today it’s South Bend and Warsaw's turn.

"What's important to us is that we're all over the state of Indiana, and so we obviously looked at areas where there were a lot of Fever season ticket holders, but we also wanted to look at cities where there's just a lot of population, where there's a lot of interest in basketball," WNBA All-Star Consultant Dianna Boyce said.

Now if you want your shot at scoring WNBA All-Star tickets, it all starts with opting in, according to Boyce.

All you have to do is head to allstarhunt2025.com and sign up for email alerts.

Once you’re in, you’ll get the daily clue one hour before the rest of the general public.

If you’re first to the mystery location and you answer the trivia question correctly, you’ll unlock a special briefcase and find out if you’ve won tickets to Friday night’s Starry 3-Point Contest/Kia Skills Challenge or Saturday's WNBA All-Star Game.

"We take it and make it and make it so much more than a game. It is so important to us to get the community involved. Whether you have a seat to the actual events, or you're just coming to be a part of the scavenger hunt or various other community activations that we have going on, it's important that we have the opportunity available across multiple different interests and areas of interest related," Boyce said.

On the court, three former Notre Dame stars made this year’s all-star roster-rookie Sonia Citron, veteran Skylar Diggings and four-time All-Star Jackie Young.

They’ll be joined by big names like Caitlin Clark, Paige Bueckers, Angel Reese, Sabrina Ionescu, A’ja Wilson and Breanna Stewart.

"Our time has come. We've watched a lot of men's sports over many, many decades. And now, the passion and the ability and the fortitude is being recognized for what women on the court and on the field or on the pitch are able to do as well. It's just the rising tide of various teams and various individual players, and to see that and to be able to celebrate that, and the fandom and the fact that young fans are embracing it, we're just continuing to create future generations, and we're going to continue to see this tide rise."

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