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In just a few moments, a person who has never once lost an argument is about to be completely undone by a photograph. They will look at it with the relaxed confidence of someone who considers themselves sharp, observant, and generally ahead of the curve, but that feeling won't last. This is what puzzles do to people, and this is exactly why we love them.

The human brain is a spectacular piece of machinery that is also, under the right circumstances, catastrophically easy to fool. A cleverly hidden object, a manipulated image, a pattern that refuses to resolve itself no matter how hard you stare, and suddenly the most intelligent person in the room is leaning three inches from their screen, muttering to themselves.

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    #2

    A colorful brain puzzle game with various shaped pieces, designed to humble confident people.

    Azza517 Report

    Rinso The Red
    Community Member
    3 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    But... the answer is right there on the lid isn't it?

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    #3

    A classic word search brain puzzle with a list of words like arrear, rarer, airier, and terraria to find.

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    Rick Murray
    Community Member
    1 hour ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Oooh, evil. I've saved this to print out and do at work during my break.

    If you sailed through these puzzles with smug ease, here is something to bring you back down to earth. The hardest logic puzzle ever created was designed by philosopher George Boolos, and it goes like this: there are three gods. One always tells the truth, one always lies, and one answers randomly. They will answer "da" or "bal," but you don't know which means yes and which means no.

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    You have three yes-or-no questions to figure out who is who. That's it. Three questions. Three gods. A language you don't understand. Boolos, a professor at MIT, a man who thought about thinking for a living, considered this the most difficult logic puzzle ever constructed. So if you couldn't even make it past puzzle one, please know that you are in very good company.

    #4

    A large grid of illustrations including a whistle, a whale, a sheep, and a waiter, forming an intricate brain puzzle or song game.

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    martymcmatrix
    Community Member
    2 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Whistle While You Work...A Whiter Shade of Pale...Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head...Mull of Kintyre...Green Green Grass of Home...Let's Twist Again......🤹🏽

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    For those who like their puzzles with a side of genuine national mystery, meet Kryptos, an encrypted copper sculpture sitting quietly in the courtyard of CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia. Installed in 1990, it contains four separate encoded messages carved into its surface. Three of them have been solved after years of effort by some of the most analytically gifted people on the planet.

    The fourth is a 97-character passage that has defeated everyone who has attempted it, including, presumably, the actual intelligence agency it lives in front of. The artist, Jim Sanborn, has occasionally released single-word clues to keep the world from giving up entirely, which suggests he is either generous or deeply enjoys watching people suffer. Possibly both.

    #7

    A chess brain puzzle, PAWN=QUEEN, with white chess pieces arranged on a small wooden board.

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    DH
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 hour ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The instruction on the plaque is wrong. The goal is to move the red queen to the red square. So you have to move the pawn to the top of the board, convert it to a queen and then move it to the red square.

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    Depending on how you did with these puzzles, this will either comfort or deeply concern you. IQ tests use exactly this kind of visual and logical problem to measure what psychologists call fluid intelligence, the ability to think logically, analyze patterns, and solve problems using nothing but your own brain, independent of anything you've ever been taught.

    It is considered one of the purest measures of raw cognitive ability. Which means that the humble hidden-object puzzle is not just a fun way to waste twenty minutes, it is, in a very real sense, a window into how your brain actually works. Whether you like what you saw through that window today is, of course, entirely between you and your reflection.

    #10

    A challenging brain puzzle displaying a circular seating arrangement for a musical chairs game with conditional clues.

    Clarification for (5): "at least two places" refers to the seats sequentially not graphically.

    Not to worry if you decide to write some useful points down, but there's added challenge factor if you reason through it using strictly your working memory.

    TheRabidBananaBoi Report

    Bi.Felicia
    Community Member
    Premium
    6 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It's Jennifer's birthday, I think.

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    #12

    A brain puzzle featuring a truck with containers, asking for the minimum number to humble confident people.

    dorsiflexion Report

    Cerulean
    Community Member
    4 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I make it 35, but I have 1 brain cell today

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    The puzzle community, and yes, there is very much a puzzle community, has developed its own rich internal vocabulary for classifying its members, and we think everyone deserves to know these words. People who are devoted to jigsaw puzzles are called 'dissectologists', which sounds like something you'd need a license for, but is actually just a person with a lot of table space and a healthy relationship with patience.

    Crossword enthusiasts go by the name 'cruciverbalists', which is an excellent word to deploy at parties. And those who dedicate significant portions of their lives to the Rubik's Cube are known as 'cubers', a community so committed that they have developed dozens of specialized algorithms, hold world records measured in seconds, and will absolutely beat you. Don't challenge a cuber. Just don't.

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    #13

    A worksheet to build words from letter tiles, an educational brain puzzle for learning.

    baccarat-monkey Report

    UKGrandad
    Community Member
    5 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Turn the 'p' upside down to make a 'd'. 'dash' and 'them'.

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    #15

    Three circular coasters with different brain puzzles on them, including letter and word play.

    HydroAlarm Report

    Chich the witch
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 hour ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    You are too wise for me, To err on the side of. Not sure of the last one, breakfast?

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    And because the human brain is a truly magnificent and endlessly complicated thing, it has found a way to be frightened of puzzles. Puzzlephobia, specifically the fear of scrambling, is a documented anxiety centred around the terror of picking up something like a Rubik's Cube and making it irreparably worse.

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    The fear is not of failing to solve the puzzle. It is engaging with it at all and leaving it in a state so chaotic that recovery seems impossible. For anyone who has ever picked up a Rubik's Cube that was already partially solved, made two confident moves, and then spent the next forty minutes making things significantly worse, this fear is not irrational. It is extremely well-founded. We see you. We are you.

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    #16

    A white card with a math brain puzzle that reads 1+1+2+1 NOT 1+2+1+1.

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    poiplescales
    Community Member
    1 hour ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Counting shots at the end of the film Clue!

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    #18

    An image displaying four different brain puzzles, presented as a test of common words, phrases, or sayings.

    Odd-Way1441 Report

    Bi.Felicia
    Community Member
    Premium
    6 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A- reading between the lines B- zebra crossing C- double vision D- bags under eyes

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    The best-selling puzzle in human history is not a crossword, not a jigsaw, and not a logic problem scrawled on a napkin by a philosopher. It is a small plastic cube with coloured stickers, invented in 1974 by a Hungarian architecture professor named Ernő Rubik, who originally built it to help his students understand three-dimensional space and did not initially realize it was a puzzle at all.

    It took him over a month to solve his own invention. That man went on to sell an estimated 500 million units globally, making the Rubik's Cube the single best-selling toy in the history of human commerce. Ernő Rubik accidentally invented the world's most infuriating object, couldn't solve it himself, and became extraordinarily successful anyway. Honestly, it's the most inspiring story on this entire list.

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    If you consider yourself a serious jigsaw enthusiast, allow us to introduce you to the World Jigsaw Puzzle Championship, an annual competition in which teams of four compete to complete a 500-piece puzzle in the fastest time possible, with the best teams finishing in under an hour in a display of focused, silent, genuinely impressive coordination.

    The championship draws competitors from dozens of countries, each with their own system, their own strategy, and their own deeply held opinions about whether you should sort by edge pieces first, a debate that, within the jigsaw community, carries approximately the same emotional weight as a general election. It is competitive. It is passionate. It is people taking a children's activity to its absolute logical extreme.

    #22

    A colorful mural with various images like a red armchair, a green eye, a jester, and letters, presenting a complex brain puzzle.

    SA3VO Report

    Bi.Felicia
    Community Member
    Premium
    5 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Life is just a bowl of chair E's/cherries

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    #23

    A classic brain puzzle showing 16 dots arranged in a square, tasking the user to connect them with four straight lines.

    This is from the children’s menu of Moose’s Tooth in Anchorage, AK, and is a variant of the classic “think outside the box” puzzle. In order to connect all the dots, using only 4 lines, the average dots per line must be 4, but I can’t figure out how to do more than 3 new dots for any line after the first (assuming every line touches at least 1 dot). I think that the directions must have a typo, or that there should a no solution. Any way to solve using the provided directions?

    TuckSteele Report

    Senjo Krane
    Community Member
    6 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I think you have to take your line way outside the box in order to bring it back in. Or something like that.

    #24

    A brain puzzle image depicting a transparent tank with an intricate system of pipes, challenging where liquid will pour out.

    RamiBMW_30 Report

    Molly Cule
    Community Member
    51 minutes ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    1-6. 2-7. 3-9. 4-13. 5-13. Although 3-9 would only work if water is forced into 3 or if a vacuum is created from suction at 9.

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    The puzzles in this list were designed to do one very specific thing: make your brain work harder than it wanted to. Some of them succeeded immediately. Some of them required a second look, a tilted screen, and a quiet moment of genuine self-doubt. And some of them sent you directly to the answer key with the speed and lack of shame of someone who has made peace with their limitations, which is a form of wisdom.

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    The human brain is extraordinary, easily fooled, endlessly fascinating, and apparently terrified of Rubik's Cubes. It contains multitudes. And if nothing else, you now know the word cruciverbalist, which is the kind of thing that sounds impressive at exactly the right moment and absolutely nowhere else. Go forth. Rest your eyes. And maybe don't pick up a Rubik's Cube that's already partially solved.

    Which one of these puzzles stumped you the most? And are you ready for more? Share your frustration with us in the comments!

    #25

    A brain puzzle with an equation 5+5+5+5=555, challenging confident people to make it true with one line.

    proudly_disengaged Report

    Bi.Felicia
    Community Member
    Premium
    5 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    If you add one line to one of the plus signs, you will make it into a number 4, so 545+5+5=555

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    #26

    The Wall Game, a brain puzzle with a grid of red and blue lines and boxes, showing rules for play.

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    Ace
    Community Member
    Premium
    5 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    ... in succession.

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    #30

    A grid of images forming a brain puzzle, including Severus Snape, a menorah, a salt shaker, Bobby Hill, a lime, Pennywise, and a store.

    BrilliantBig769 Report

    Chich the witch
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 hour ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Shake, shake, shake, Señora, shake your body line Shake, shake, shake, Señora, shake it all the time

    #31

    A number theory brain puzzle about prime numbers and divisibility rules.

    ShonitB Report

    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    3 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    False. For any higher set of three consecutive odd integers (x, x+2, x+4), at least one will be a multiple of 3, 5, or 7 and so will not be prime.

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    #32

    A brain puzzle showing an unfolded cube with various symbols, asking which assembled cube cannot be formed.

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    Fred
    Community Member
    3 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Black circle is opposite four dots, so they can't be on adjacent faces.

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    #33

    A visual brain puzzle featuring a matrix of shapes with a missing element, requiring logical deduction.

    b7k567 Report

    Chich the witch
    Community Member
    Premium
    59 minutes ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    B. The dot make a 1/4 turn and the shapes are lined up and progressing downwards to the lower right corner.

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    #34

    A textual brain puzzle about Pinocchio always lying, asking what can be concluded from his statement about green hats.

    lunetainvisivel Report

    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    3 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A. Pinocchio has at least one hat. (And at least one that is not green.) You have to eliminate C because if he has no hats "All my hats are green" is not a lie.

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    #36

    A logic-based brain puzzle titled Six-Figure Logic with easy, medium, hard, and expert levels of equations.

    Key-Improvement4850 Report

    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    2 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The one labeled EXPERT is the easiest. A=1, B=7, C=8, D=1, E=3, F=6.

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    #39

    A geometric brain puzzle showing three circles of 1 cm radius inside a square, asking for the area of the rectangle.

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    Fred
    Community Member
    3 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The centre of the lower circle is root(3) below the centres of the upper two.

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    #45

    A money riddle brain puzzle for confident people, involving a stolen $100 bill and a store.

    EliteSpurs007 Report

    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    2 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The store has lost $30 in cash and whatever amount it paid for the goods that it was charging customers $70 for. for instance, if it had purchased those good wholesale for $50, then it was out a total of $80 ($30 + $50).

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    #46

    A brain tickler puzzle with four words (SPLAT, PETRI, ENTRAP, GRABS) for confident people.

    whoohme Report

    A. Br.
    Community Member
    3 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    All black type face on a blue background.

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    #50

    A detailed hidden object scene featuring cartoon bugs, a classic visual brain puzzle.

    airplanesandass Report

    Chich the witch
    Community Member
    Premium
    45 minutes ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Mitten is upper left corner in a picture taped to the wall, next.

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    #51

    A brain puzzle featuring a matchstick pattern, asking to move two matches to form four identical squares.

    Spiritual-Lemon7040 Report

    Cerulean
    Community Member
    3 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Just take away the two in the SE corner??

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    #52

    A challenging brain puzzle illustrating three prisoners (A, B, C) with hats, requiring a logical deduction.

    jagriff333 Report

    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    1 hour ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    There is at least one hat of each color. If C saw two black hats or two white ones on A and B, he could answer correctly immediately about his hat's color, choosing the one he had not seen. The fact that C does not answer immediately tells A and B that their hats are of different colors. So B knows that if A wears a black hat then he (B) is wearing a white and vice versa.

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    #57

    An algebra brain puzzle involving concatenated numbers and finding sums of digits.

    ShonitB Report

    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    1 hour ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Here's a start. When multiplied out, X will end with a 6 and Y with a 4. When added to get Z, the last digit will be 0.

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    #58

    A triangular brain puzzle featuring numbers at vertices and a central number, with one missing value to find.

    b7k567 Report

    Fred
    Community Member
    3 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Multiply the numbers in the lower corners, and add ...

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    #59

    A challenging brain puzzle about transporting a person across the desert using multiple cars and petrol transfers.

    Aggressive-Credit562 Report

    Serena Myers
    Community Member
    4 hours ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Two. One driven and one towed with another full tank. Yes, no, I know.

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    #62

    A geometry brain puzzle asking to find the area of a right-angled triangle with sides labeled 12, 4√3, and 8√3.

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    Fred
    Community Member
    5 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    If the lengths of the sides are correct, then Pythagoras tells us that B is a right angle, so the area is 24 root 3. But 4 root 3 is not 12, so C is not 45°.

    #63

    A geometry brain puzzle showing 5 identical rectangles forming a larger rectangle with a shaded triangle.

    Metaldrake Report

    Fred
    Community Member
    4 hours ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Assuming those are two squares in the middle column, each small rectangle measures 8 × 4 cm. Then AD = 8 cm and the area of the triangle follows.

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    #64

    A math homework problem with missing numbers in a grid puzzle, asking to find the value of a triangle symbol.

    subastringent Report

    A. Br.
    Community Member
    3 hours ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I said, "Oh, look" there are 3 triangles

    #65

    An open box of colorful Italian Chocolate Eggs, an example of brain puzzles as a sweet treat.

    d_zeen Report

    Roman Arendt
    Community Member
    1 hour ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I don't know the question, but the answer is: "They look delicious!"

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    #69

    An antique ring with an eye, the letter X, and the word 'Return' engraved, posing a brain puzzle.

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    Chich the witch
    Community Member
    Premium
    37 minutes ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Full blown guess - I expect no return?

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    #78

    A brain puzzle image depicting a cat and a turtle on and under tables, with measurements for height.

    DrFreakenstien Report

    Fred
    Community Member
    4 hours ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    cat + table - tortoise = 170. tortoise + table - cat = 130. Add them: 2 table = 300.

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    #81

    A grid of 9 rebus brain puzzles, each containing images and text that represent a word or phrase.

    Large-King8990 Report

    Fred
    Community Member
    4 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    top left: fez ant. bottom right: star(s) ling. In between there's a flame in go.

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