Ah! This sounds like one of those viral “personality test” images where they say “Most people can’t do this” or “Only narcissists see it a certain way.” The instruction to “count the squares” is the key. Here’s how to think about it carefully:
1. What It Is
- The image usually shows overlapping squares or a grid of squares.
- People are asked to count all the squares, including:
- Large squares
- Medium squares formed by combining smaller ones
- Smallest individual squares
2. Why It’s Hard
- Our brains naturally focus on individual squares rather than all possible combinations, which makes the total count tricky.
- Optical illusions or “hidden squares” in the image increase difficulty.
3. The Narcissist Claim
- Viral captions claim “only narcissists get it right”, but this is not scientifically valid.
- Performance depends on attention to detail, patience, and spatial reasoning, not personality type.
4. How to Count Squares Correctly
- Start with the smallest squares. Count all individual squares.
- Combine them into larger squares (2×2, 3×3, etc.)
- Include the largest square that encompasses the entire grid.
- Add them all together for the total.
Example: In a simple 3×3 grid:
- 9 small squares (1×1)
- 4 medium squares (2×2)
- 1 large square (3×3)
- Total = 14 squares
If you want, I can break down a common “narcissist squares” puzzle step by step and show exactly how many squares there are in total—it’s surprisingly tricky.
Do you want me to do that?