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I literally saw the exact same pattern as Josh for question 13. I was so confident so i actually felt his confusion when it wasn't right and no one wanted to listen
@@gabrielhernandez8483 nah it doesnt make sense because if it moved to the right there would be 1 photo with the petal only on the right side of the 3rd flower
With the flower one I got A. My working out was: you have to think of it organically. In the second slide the flower on the right is dying so disappears on the third slide. on the fourth slide the flower in the middle begins dying but the flower on the right is growing back. because of that, logically, the next slide would have the middle flower dead and the right flower grown back therefore A.
About Josh and Vik and their respective #13: At Mensa (some IQ-organization) they teach you that people view things like these in different ways, because of different thinking patterns, caused by outer circumstances. The "correct way" to view them is how Simon explains it - you imitate the movement of the whole picture and see it as states of things, that are changing. Viks way is very interesting because its the moving way: In his head there is an invisible row of items around the shown part of the module. The #13 task is proposed with this in mind so both ways work. Josh's way is in theory the same as the "correct way", but with him not imitating the movement of the whole picture, but looking at the transformation of individual items, thus leading to him being convinced its B. One would usually award half a point for this, because the thinking is right, but not concidering everything given in the module. Hope this explains it, great banter in the vid, we all know Ethan simply has exam nerves.
I still don't get it. Simon says the Right pedal of the Third Flower dissapears for 2. But it is gone for all 3 After the first. So I don't get how the right pedal is coming back. I was having the same way as Josh. Because the right Pedal never came back for the following Pictures and therefore the logical step, that the Right one can come back didn't Occur to me. The Left one came back yeah, but never the right one. How exactly am I supposed to see that? Or could you help me find the logic in the right pedal coming back?
@@TheMGlock the way I saw it was, the right petal leaves then the left petal leaves. After they've both left they start coming back first the left one then the right one. The reason you know the right one is coming back is because the left one came back. This process happens to the flowers going from right to left.
@@ghostlord5611 Interesting way of looking at it. So going away is right to left and coming back is left to right. OK. I still think I wouldn't get to that conclusion at the End, but thanks for that :)
@@VOTVRe it does make sense. When there's a half of a flower, it dissappears in the next one. So when there 2 halves, the next one would have 2 flowers dissappear.
yeah josh made complete sense, but they used plants to illustrate so you are made to think that the half-plant is regrowing instead of dying because it just died.
@@lionclaws1880 say we call the petals A1,A2,B1,B2,C1,C2 as we go across. In the first photo C2 disappears, then both C petals disappear. Then B2 and C2 disappear, then all of the B and C petals disappear. After that, A2,B2 and C2 would disappear, then finally all the petals would be gone.
Nah cuz that’s not a self sustaining pattern - there is no pattern to when it loses half a petal so it’s just a smart observation, it’s a smart last-ditch attempt if you can’t find out the actual answer but it was wrong ig 🤷🏾♂️
@@negahuhh I don’t think so. Ethan openly admits when sucks at something. JJ does not. And let me remind you, this is not a real IQ test. If you take an actual IQ test, you will not see questions like this. You will get cubes etc. which you’ll have to solve yourself just by looking at pictures, and you will get questions, but your points depend on your answer to each question. No answer is wrong when you take an IQ test, because they ask you what YOU THINK is the correct answer. These “IQ tests” online are made for fun. You can get 0 correct answers on these kind of IQ tests and still have a high IQ, because IQ tests are more than figures and questions. There are IQ tests with maths, physics, chemistry, biology, geography, IT, reaction time etc. If you ask a chemist about IT engineering he’s OPT to fail. The same can be used on these kind of IQ tests.
@@0m4r21o I took the Mensa IQ test which is the most standardised one and it's very much like this video, with a few other types of questions. Only you get like 2 hours or something to answer many more questions, and you lose marks for wrong answers.
for the flower question: i was thinking of them more as shapes than flowers, so josh’s answer makes sense if you think the second shape is donating half of itself to the last shape (which is gone). Then the established rule is: shapes can only donate when the flower is completely gone. With this logic the last flower wouldn’t ever become whole because the second flower can’t donate it’s remaining half, and instead both flowers would fall. leaving B as the answer. But if you think of it as regenerating flowers (like a life cycle) A makes more sense. Depends on how you contextualize it.
U should imagine it as days, each picture is a day, so day all leafs are there, day 2 one flower loses one leaf, day 3 the flower loses another leaf, but day 4 the one flower grows one back and another loses one. So it makes sence that the one that just lost one will lose another one. Since the other flower grew one back i figured it should grow another one back as well. That is probably what the quiz wanted u to think
The way to simplify the petals is to turn it into a number sequence, the third flower for example if I remember correctly is 2, 1, 0 , 1, 2. It must be full come the final picture
Or you just use halves as a transitional between full and none. As 3rd was at none and 2nd was at full before half transitional, it'll be the opposite afterwards, hence FNF F is to H, where H is to N. N is to H, where H is to F FFF - FFH - FFN - FHH - FNF
First the 3rd flower moves both of it pedals to the right off the screen one by one, then the middle flower moves both if its pedals to the 3rd pedals spot one by one :)
The case for A should have been in slide 4 the petal on the right most flower should have been to the right of the stem indicating that it is in a different state than what we know about flowers with half petals from previous knowledge ie that they "die" , the logic for B is much more sound,,, but take it with a pinch of salt it's an internet "IQ test" so accuracy isn't really a thing on those
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I got 12 too, the flower one got me and I thought indulgent was as in "I indulge in beverages." So I put reckless. I also don't know what a LP is so I picked the diagram that had them side by side, one leading into the next.
In terms of intelligence, Simon is very underrated. He's a logical and aware thinker compared to the rest and probably the smartest one there. No offence to the rest of the boys lol
@@joshranimal2292 Vik is mainly booksmart. He's not very logical or creative like Simon or harry. He's got a very childlike mindset and hes less aware than the others. Josh also has a little bit of that characteristic as well. Not a bad thing if you're wondering thats just their way of thinking
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I got you. 21:00 let's assume it's a plant and got eaten by a bug. Bug eats the right plant in 2 full steps. 1 leaf at a time. So till the 3rd step the bug ate the whole right plant. Then the bug goes to the centre plant and eats it(one leaf at a time), in the meantime the right plant starts growing back one leaf at a time. So till the 4th step bug has eaten 1 leaf from the centre plant and an older leaf has regenerated on the right plant. Thus in the 5th step the centre plant will be fully eaten and the right plant would've fully regenerated.
The logic Josh has for the flower one was the same as mine I just thought that the pattern was the right side petal on the furthest right flower goes away then the left petal go away then it shows both the middle and right side flower have the right side petal missing and I thought the pattern repeated as in this time instead of only the right side flower both the middle and right side flower follow the pattern together
I think the problem with this is that it isn't a series, because there is no connection between the third one and the forth one and than it's just two different cases with the same relation
I chose A for the flower one but while they were still choosing I also said “couldn’t it be B?” Because the pattern could be “Starting from the right most flower: flowers lose their petals from right to left until there aren’t any petals left on it. Once the flower to your right loses a petal, you begin losing a pedal from right to left and all the previous flowers gain their left petal back. Once the flower to your left loses all its petals you also lose all your petals.” So basically if “B” was the next frame, then the following frame after that would be all flowers with only their left petal, and the frame after that would be all flowers with no petals.
@@clennis8137 Didn’t look at it that way, but it does make sense. Tbh with iq tests thats based on images and patterns there’s usually multiple answers possible just depending on the logic you’re using.
I see what Josh meant: the pattern in the "stalk" was full, half, empty. In the first cycle, the 3rd stalk went full, half, empty. So logically, when the 2nd and 3rd stalk was half, the next would be both being empty ie Option B. But it is a series, and from the 3rd picture to the 4th picture there is no correlation. Hence, there must be a different reasoning. So B is not right.
@@andreimarita9766 if you view each flower as individual, when it dies it goes full, half, empty and then it starts to regrow again giving the whole pattern full, half, empty, half, full which is what we see on the rightmost flower. you get answer A by applying this pattern to the middle flower
@@huntervilhauer3341 You have to look at every flower separate. First flower is full, full, full, full, so the first flower in box 5 has to be full. Third flower is full, half, empty, half, so is has to be full. With the information that 1 and 3 have to have full flowers the only option is A.
Josh is right for the petal one, also feel like simon should include himself in the moresidemen videos as i feel like it would of been harder to get 14 with the pressure of time and everyone there ect
For the petals, you can have two alternating patterns so the first pattern shown in squares 1 and 3 is a decrease by 1 flower while another pattern in 2 and 4 is the right petal disappears from right to left. That would leave B as the answer.
For the people struggling with the petal one, each individual flower has it's own 'life cycle' whereby it completely dies as well as completely reforms itself petal by petal directly following it's death, this begins after the flower to it's right dies (halfway point of the lifecycle). The 4th sequence in the pattern suggests this to be the case given the presence of the petal that had previously been removed from the third flower, thus suggesting a cycle pattern.
Here is a possible explanation to 13. 1) Focus on just the flower on the right and count the petals. It goes 2,1,0,1 implying that the fifth picture will have 2 petals on the right most flower. 2) Once the flower on the right most has 0 petals, the middle flower starts losing petal which would mean in the fifth picture, the middle flower should have no petals. 3) If there were more pictures to this, I would imagine, the leftmost flower would lose petals once the middle flower reaches 0 petals.
The first point is the best explanation. You have to arithmetise the pictures, to the 2,1,0,1 sequence. I think that's what Vikk did he just explained it horribly hahaha
This is the best way to solve it. It's a technique that translates to any problem similar to this. Making them extremely easy to solve as you can basically solve the problem with half the images and the most basic of maths, instead of making it into a convuluted thought experiment It's the case with most of these problems, and why IQ tests are so bad (worked most tricks out myself when I was young, and ended up with SAT scores way higher than I should have had). Another trick is for the cubes. It's to pretend you're holding the left most square and pull it right until it connects with the right most square. This on its own will basically force your brain to solve the cube problems bascially straight away. Becaue then you only have to visualise 2 squares of the cube and not 6. Even if your brain can't handle the visualisation quickly, it'll still make them easier to solve
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Simon is low-key the smartest. Maybe not mathematically like Vik, but he’s incredibly logical and quick witted, and thinks outside the box. When somebody says something, Simon would make a well made, well thought out joke quickly in response. That alone shows his capacity of brainpower.
I think brainpower has to include creativity, though. I'm not sure Simon is an "outside the box" thinker. He's entrepreneurial and he plays devils advocate well but he's too straight-laced and diplomatic to be truly creative. Also, having quick-wit is overrated because that's about reaction-time and doesn't really matter outside of social scenarios
Leaf pattern was -1,-1,+1,+1 once the flower had no petals i.e after step 2 the pattern repeats for the next flower on the left. The next one in the series after that would be 1,1,2 petals.
You can invent a rule to make any of the answers correct, and in my opinion none of the rules are simple enough to make one of them overwhelmingly more obvious. For A to be correct, the rules could be: If any flowers have only one petal, that petal moves to the next flower on the right. If no flowers have only 1 petal, the rightmost petal moves to the next flower. And if there is no flower on the right, the petal just disappears. For B: If a flower has only 1 petal, it falls off. If a flower has 0 petals, 1 grows back. If no flowers have only 1 petal, the rightmost full flower loses 1 petal. For C: Anytime a full flower loses a petal, the second petal will fall off next round. If a flower has no petals, 1 will grow back and the flower stays that way forever. The first time a flower loses a petal can be random, either way the C is the only option that can happen with this rule set. D: The leftmost lone petal moves to the next flower on the right. If no flowers have only one petal, the rightmost existing petal moves to the right. If a flower has 2 petals for 4 consecutive turns, both of that flower's petals fall off. E: the right flower has a repeating 2-1-0-1 pattern. The middle flower has a repeating 2-2-2-1-1-1-0-0-0 pattern. The left flower has a repeating 2-2-2-2-0-0-0-0 pattern. All of these rule sets could be viable and all of them are on similar levels of simplicity. Why is only one of them correct?
@@MattMcConaha You need to have enough information to support a repeatable pattern for those answers. Flower 1 must have 2 flowers. In the sequence Flower 2 did not lose a petal the same turn that Flower 3 had 0 petals so this removes C, D and E from the possible answers. Then you have the fact that in no point in the sequence do you lose more that 1 petal across all 3 flowers per turn(ignoring any gains). For B to be correct you would have to lose 2 petals. Based on the provided information there is nothing to suggest that you can lose two petals per turn. Also no petal moves between flowers at any point. To indicate to the reader that petals are shared between flowers then on the 4th picture Flower 3 would have had a petal on the right side not the left to give a visual indication that a petal has moved from 1 flower to another. These test are based on logical reasoning not logical guesses.
9:21 Simon using Mr. Beast’s idea of incorporating the ad within his game is awesome to see come to fruition after he talked about it on his What’s Good? Podcast w/ Randy
For the flower it's literally as someone named it "life cycle" as in they're all full until one is only half in the second pattern meaning it lost one petal, on the next pattern the right one lost all of its petals and by the time it grows one back in the last pattern, it's the turn of the middle flower to lose its petals, that's why the answer is A bc the logic sequel is that the middle one lose it second petal while the right one gets its other petal and become full again xD
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You can't be sure based on the pictures given that it grows back to a full flower though. There is no logic then. This means that you have to make an assumption, but if you are supposed to make assumptions, you might as well assume the logic behind the series is just that it's random, making all the answers correct.
I'm 6 months late, but everyone's logic was so different from mine for the flowers, and I got it A. You have 3 flowers. The flowers are wilting/dying from right to left and then growing back. The flower doesn't start wilting until the flower to its right dies. Start with 3 healthy flowers (Left Mid Right), 1: LMR Healthy, 2: R starts to die, 3: R dies, 4: M starts to die and R starts to grow, 5: M dies and R blooms.
I did not expect to get 14 of them. I chose A for the flowers one (question 13) because the first flower is always fully intact, so that narrowed it down to A or B. Then I eliminated B because the third flower loses a "petal" twice, so it should gain a petal twice again
Finally someone else who understands it well lol. I found it more confusing how people thought the flower on the right would lose its last and only petal again.
you came at the right conclusion but your logic is flawed. because your sentence"because the first flower is always fully intact" isnt correct. casue the sixt figure would be 1 petal 1 petter 2 petals. or 1 petal, 1 petal, 1 petal. meaning that the first flower won't always stay intact
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The solution to that question is that you have think of it organically. Think of each step as like a day. In a day the right flower loses a petal. In the second day the right flower loses its second petal. On the third day the flower in the middle loses a petal and the right flower grows one. So on the fourth day which is the sequence we have to guess the flower in the middle loses its second petal and the right flower regrows its second petal. Thats why it is A. So these logical rules follow: If a flower on your right loses all its petals then on the next day you will lose one petal, the flower on your right will gain one. On the day after that you will lose your second one.
@@itislamin With the ”correct” answer your solution makes perfect sense. However given only the pattern in question, answer B would be correct aswell. It is a flawed question with 2 correct answers but only 1 gives you a point.
For number 13, I understand Josh’s logic because I also put down the same answer, but the reason we got it wrong was because from picture to picture, only half of a petal is removed, but going from the last picture to the answer B, it removed 2 halves of a petal (or a full petal) so it doesn’t logically follow from the previous pictures.
it does tho because it loses a half but it shows it regrowing and since it loses a petal every turn it’s right to assume it’ll grow the next turn like it did (if u understand what i’m trying to say)
@@blazeprominence3287 Indeed. Starts from the right, loosing one by one every picture. When the right is done, the middle starts to loose its petals, while the right one grows again, one by one.
@@valentinmanz4089 and also the pattern Josh said wouldn't work. As it would start as full flowers and end with 0-1 petals per every flower. With "dying" and regrowing the pattern can repeat itself indefinitely.
13 was dumb, because there are multiple ways to interpret that problem. I also got B, because it’s a repeating pattern. Following Josh’s logic, next one would be all 3 halved.
Vik is absolutely right about the flowers, just move leaves one by one (from right to left), moving them to the right to the next stalk (or off the screen when on the furthest stalk right). They don't move within the same stalk. 1. furthest leaf right moves to right (off screen) 2. second furthest leaf right moves right (off screen because it's the same stalk, can't move to another stalk so it's off) 3. third furthest leaf right moves to the next stalk on the right 4. fourth furthest leaf moves to the next stalk on the right, leaving no leaves on the second stalk and the two leaves moved from the second stalk to the furthest right, leaving two leaves on the furthest right = answer A. Or just be a mathematician and think of it like binary with three values per bit (i.e. ternary or trinary), each stalk being a bit and the number of leaves representing the bit value from 0-2, and do like a weird arithmetic bit shift right twice per bit. (yes I know that's not how it works) 222 -> 221 -> 220 -> 211 -> 202. Also, Josh's explanation of stalks with only one leaf "die" makes sense otherwise, but it doesn't explain the last one where a "dead" stalk gets a new leaf and then dies again. that's only thinking two steps at a time, not accounting for the whole sequence.
22:26 How I worked that our is : Just looking at the 3rd stem so the order of the stems are : Opened - Halved - disappeared - Halved again - opened again So if u just see the 4th image then which is : opened - Halved - Halved (again) so the following will be Opened - disappeared - opened (again) Also only when the leaves on stem disappears then the stem before it changes that's why the 1st stem didn't changed and will change in the next iteration
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Josh’s reasoning was sound - these tests can have multiple interpretations and the ‘correct’ answer is usually what what the examiners have decided Here’s what Josh was trying to say - 1 flower halves then disappears - 2 flowers half - by his logic 2 should disappear In this model the next sequence would then be 3 flowers half 3 disappear
@@NidokingOtsutsuki no. it says by logic but not everyone uses the same logic so its a flawed question. there isnt an objective answer. its completely subjective
@@lewis0705 there ABSOLUTELY is an objective answer. The flowers petals are moved to the right 1 by 1. Josh's logic didn't even work, it didn't even begin to explain how the petal just magically reappeared, which he admitted and then shut up. It's okay to be wrong, accepting it is the first step in correcting your wrongness.
@@NidokingOtsutsuki mate sorry to tell you but that's false too. Each plant will lose a leaf then another. Then it will grow a leaf back, and then another. It starts with the rightmost plant and then the middle plant, so the answer would be A because rightmost plant has grown both leaves back and the middle one has lost both. The next stage in the pattern would be they all have one leaf, assuming the pattern repeats, because rightmost would lose one again, middle would gain one back, and left would lose a leaf for first time.
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For the stem one, if you simply think of it as a stem losing/regrowing leaves, it becomes intuitive. By the pictures, the third stem loses a leaf, and then proceeds to lose another leaf. Next, the second stem loses a leaf and the third stem begins to grow a leaf back. Next, you can filter it down to few possibilities, the second stem will lose a leaf (since it is in that phase), and the third stem will continue growing its final leaf back (since it is in the growing phase), using that logic, it follows that the second stem would have no remaining leaves and the third stem will have both of its leaves fully grown, that leaves the only options to be A or D, but it cannot be D as that implies that the first stem would have lost both of its leaves in a single iteration, which is not possible. Finally, option A is left. Sorry for the long explanation, but it becomes extremely intuitive like this.
first comment I've seen that is following the logic that is set out in the question rather than them making up their own. Worked it out the same way mate!
Yeah I had something like this but I couldn’t explain it. I knew things were going away and then coming back in halves so I picked a but wasn’t sure exactly why
Ended up with 13/15. Got 5 and 6 wrong, I related the two animals to themselves rather than with the answer so reached Hamster / Dog and I totally forgot what pragmatic meant lol. For 13 I imagined the petals moving to the right if there was no stem to latch onto, so I reached answer A in that way. Really fun to go through these with the guys. I struggled a lot on the 1st cube, i had to pause for a bit to visualize it in my head properly, I imagine if I was in the seat with them I would have gotten it wrong.
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I got 14/15, the cassette cd question made no sense to me, and still doesn't. I thought about hamster/dog for a long time but I realised that it was more likely to be owl/bird because owls are carnivorous and cats probably eat birds because they are like mice with wings. I also had no clue what pragmatic meant but I knew it wasn't any of the others so I guessed.
I understand where Josh is coming from for 13, I did the same thing. The 6th petal is removed, and in the next image so is its counterpart. Next image the 6th and 4th petals are removed, so logically so would both of their counterparts. I kinda understand why A is right but tbh it's not a very good question when two of the answers make good sense. Imo, knowing how both work I still think B is the more logical option, moving the image perspective is a trick to me, not an intelligence test. Kinda why IQ tests mean nothing unless done by a professional and even then the results aren't important lmao. I got 12/15 so I'm a happy man today but question 13 is the only one I got wrong where I didn't slap my knee and go "oooooohhhhhhhh i seeeee" All good fun though, good video
I thought the same at first too i chose B but looking back it’s the life cycle of a plant so it makes more sense it’s just not obvious that those are plants i thought they were the butts of arrows lol
I got 12 and for the leaves question vik is correct the leaves are moving right., 1st order - the far right branch is getting empty (which was shown in 2 steps) 2nd order the middle one is getting empty but when the moving right they have an empty branch to move rather than going away from the box the shifts to that) so in the next step the middle one will become empty and both leaves will shift to far right one., So option A shows that., As per the series . The 3rd order the far left brach will loose leaves and in first step one will move to the middle one., so the first will have 1, second will have one and third one will still have 2., also in the next step the first branch will become empty and both leaves will shift to middle one., so the first one will have none, the middle one will have 2, and third one will have 2. Hope the explanation was easy to understand.,
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Josh is right for choosing the B option on the 13th question. Explanation: In 2nd photo the 3rd stripe reduces to half, then in the 3rd photo it reduces fully. Following the same pattern now 2nd & 3rd stripes both of them get reduced to half of their size so next obviously they'll be reducing fully in 4th frame.
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For #2 i picked C because Cassette and CD shares a letter, CD and LP shares length but Cassette and LP shares nothing. For #6 I also picked C since hamster and mouse is roughly same size and cat and dog is roughly same size. The only one I got wrong and literally couldn't have gotten right was last one but tbf my native language isn't english so it doesn't surprise me...
I have been binge watching through sidemen videos , and we have to see a new update iq test from the sidemen , or we love seeing the activity’s that involve the tv , bc a lot of us audience are in school / studying and it’s just fun to see sidemen doing , guess the country games / iq tests , guess the emoji or guess the link , we enjoy and it brings a laughter and comfort well we are studying!! , definitely need a update on iq tests that would be fun 🧡
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The correct solution of question 13: The petals are worth x3 for the left flower, x2 for the middle flower and x1 for the right flower. Slide 1 = 2x3 + 2x2 + 2x1 = 12. Slide 2: 2x3 + 2x2 + 1x1 = 11. Slide 3: 2x3 + 2x2 + 0x1 = 10. Slide 4: 2x3 + 2x1 + 1x1 = 9. The pattern is that for each new slide, the value drops by 1. The correct answer must then be a slide adding up to 8. Thus slide A must be correct (2x3 + 0x2 + 2x1 = 8).
This explanation is interesting. I literally just said “well, seems like there can’t be more than 2 missing petals at a time,” and went with the only answer that fit. Got it right lol
22:26 okay Vikk…This sequence basically shows that each plant has 2 leaves and (starting from the right most plant) as one plant loses a leaf, another plant will have to gain a leaf. The twist here is that one plant can’t have more than 2 leaves therefore, in order for a plant to gain a leaf, the plant will have to lose one. As shown in the 3rd box, the rightmost plant has no leaves left so it can now gain a leaf thus the 4th box. As this sequence moves in a right to left order, the answer will be A because the rightmost plant gains a leaf and the middle one loses one leaf (leaving it with 0 leaves)
I contest this, I clearly understand your logic, but if the leaf by the right disappears first, on what logic do you say the leaf by the left appears first?. I strongly believe the illustration lacks enough proof to approve of that as an actual progression.
Y'all the answer is far simpler and does not involve life and death. The pattern is that each consecutive image can be made from the previous image by changing the location of exactly one petal. If you look at the the 4th image versus the options, all options except for A require more than 1 petal to be moved from the fourth image to make the final image. A is the only correct answer.
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For the flower one, here’s MY OPINION (I may be wrong): Firstly, the far right flower, sheds one half off. Then, sheds another off. Next, the middle flower sheds one half off, BUT the previous flower has regrown one. From this, I assumed that the middle flower will then lose its other half, and then the far right flower will regrow another half. Therefore, A is the answer.
Question 13, I worked it out as after one turn of the flower being fully gone it regrows a petal, or you can look at it as the sequence can never have less than 4 petals on the board so as it takes away from one side it slowly adds another to the open space where it wasn’t taken from.
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To respond to question 13, which is a classic psychometric test question, the arrow on the left stays static the whole way through. That disregards C, D and E. The arrow on the right interchanges from whole, to half, to none, to half, to whole, which gives you the answer of A. The middle arrows show inconclusive patterns to draw a narrative from. Josh's argument would be valid if the first image didn't exist, but his logic doesn't follow the trend.
For question 13, I treated it like Binary numbers. Furthest right flower, each petal removed is +1. Middle flower, each petal is +2. So the pattern reads 0,1,2,3, then the answer is A cause removing the 2 middle petals = 4. None of the others do = 4. Ill explain firther if people still dont understand but Binary numbers is pretty fun to learn. '0's and '1's 😅
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I feel like a lot of "IQ test" questions are faulty in that they are written as if there is a single difinitive answer when there really isn't. The first question, yeah, A was the definitive answer. The second question, no. Here's why each answer could be correct: A: the three entities are separate things with some unique qualities, so some amount of each circle will be non-overlapping. CD and LP overlap because they both have similar disc shape and the data is stored in a spiral shape. LP and Cassette overlap because they both store their data in analog. CD and Cassette overlap because they were both designed to be portable and were frequently played back on mobile systems. All three overlap because they all commonly store music files. You can come up with different reasons they overlap (e.g. Cassettes and CDs are commonly rewritable) but you can definitely come up with relationships that work. B: I'm personally finding it hard to come up with an explanation that I am happy with, but explanations surely can be made depending on how you interpret the question. Maybe something like each format relies on different technology. LP's are mechanical, cassettes are magnetic, CDs are digital. C: The diagram represents albums which were released while each medium was considered "standard." LPs existed before either of the other two, but had some overlap with cassettes. CDs overlapped with the end of cassettes, but LPs were out before CDs were invented. You could pose an argument that LPs and cassettes are still being released, but I'd counter with an argument that the diagram represents when the formats were "standard" and even though albums may continue to be released on a specific format that doesn't mean the format is standard. D: The size of the circle indicates the amount of time a certain format has existed. LPs are the large circle, cassettes the medium circle, CD's are the small circle. Basic as that, each circle represents the relationship of how long each format existed. You could say the overlapping nature represents an overlap in the time when they exist, I don't think that explanation is necessary. Anyway, that concludes my explanation. A meaningful IQ test either won't have this ambiguity or will score people based on their ability to find logical connections instead of asserting a single thing to be the difinitively correct answer.
If you see it as a Venn Diagramm, with pure set theory: no Cassettes are LPs, no LPs are CDs, no CDs are cassettes, thus B. They seemed to want you to say "Some albums are released in each format, but not all in every format, but a few in all three, which is A". Not a good question, IMO. (And I usually test extremely well in IQ tests.)
I got C based on the properties of the words. - CD and cassette have in common the characteristic of beginning with C - CD and LP share the characteristic of being two letter initialisms. I honestly didn't even consider the meanings!
Harry is actually so underrated when it comes to test like these and intelligence in general, i've noticed most of the time he ends up with good results
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For the flower one the flowers are dying and regrowing. The third flower starts to die and then stars to grow. So on the fourth panel the second and third flower look the same but are on different stages of the cycle with the third flower growing while the second one is dying. Definitely confusing but that is why A is correct.
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Yo bruvv, I’m a small content creator, and I make a variety of entertaining reactions, vlogs, and a range Of other content and I’m still working On quality but I guarantee you will find something you will enjoy🙏🏾💯
Yo Bruvv, I’m a small content creator, and I Make a variety of entertaining reactions, vlogs, and a range Of other content and I’m still working On quality but I guarantee you will find something you will enjoy🙏🏾💯
In question 2, i feel like C would also be a possible correct answer, thinking that the box represented the music factor. Then an LP can be on both a CD and a Cassette. I kinda dont see how a Cassette and a CD should overlap and they should be equals.
I thought the second one should be B. I saw the box they're all in as representing physical music storage and each circle representing a different format. There's no overlap between any of the circles because there are no further similarities between any of those 3. In fact I think A is wrong because of the three sections of overlap between each pair of two circles. What characteristic shared by a cassette and CD would fit in their shared space that isn't also a characteristics of an LP? Likewise for the other two overlap sections.
@@incendium447 no I can't seem any the only relation they have is music storage devices which is the universal set ..but they themselves should be disjointed circles because all three are different mediums .
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for 13, the pattern is basically this: - for every right side petal taken from a flower, give every other flower (except the flowers who's petal is being removed) a petal on the left side of their flower. - for every left side petal taken from a flower, give every other flower (except the flowers who's petal is being removed) a petal on the right side of their flower. - the right side petal is taken first from a flower, then the left side petal - petals taken from a flower start from the rightmost flower , go to the middle flower then go to the leftmost flower and then the cycle repeats from the rightmost flower.
Here’s how the leaf one works and why it’s A (if someone hasn’t done it already) The way to solve this is to consider each plant individually as a pattern and figure out at what point each pattern begins individually for each of the plants The cycle of each is clearly: full - lose right - lose left - regrow right - regrow left - full We can see the middle plant starts its rotation after the plant to its right loses all its leaves. Therefore after the fourth picture the furthest right would regrow it’s left leaf and the middle one would lose its left leaf as that is where they are in respect to the cycle above. The furthest left plant will start its rotation next turn as the plant to its right has now lost all its leaves (essentially it just remains the same). This leaves (no pun intended) you with answer A Feel free to comment didn’t ask G if you like :)
I think you found an explanation that fits the answer but that's not how these types of logic questions work. They are looking for the simplest answer. The simplest answer is important here because otherwise there would be hundreds of subjective ways to answer this questions. The simplest answer here is that each consecutive image can be made from the previous image by changing the location of exactly one petal. That's it. If you look at the the 4th image versus the options, all options except for A require more than 1 petal to be moved from the fourth image to make the final image. A is the only correct answer.
@@cutecub1495 Yes, although this is true that only one petal will be moved in the shown pictures - wouldn’t that be random? How do you know this will be the case every time? The question states that this is a series and therefore the petals movements consequently can be predicted - I’m aware that you claim that they are looking for the “easiest answer” but that’s no excuse to say “one petal changes each time” as there is no series there. The series I have proposed is not only a likely solution but also allows us to predict where the petals will be on picture 6,7,8,9 etc and therefore functions as a viable series. You may be correct in that it may not be the correct series… contextually we really have nothing to go from but, from what can be seen, the solution I’ve posted logically adheres to the definition of a series and is very simplistic to comprehend once explained. Please disagree and pick apart this if you like!! I enjoy being proven wrong… sometimes…😂 Also… logic puzzles work by using logic, inherently, and I’m pretty sure that’s what I used?
the flower question: 1. In each stage half a leaf is lost on ONE flower 2. If a flower has lost both halves of its leaf it will then grow them back after each stage, but this does not interfere with the loosing of half a leaf on other flowers.
@@hattchetman_2128 I thought the same as you until I thought about it. In the second image the last flower loses a petal then in the third image it loses another. In the fourth image the middle flower loses a petal and the last flower grows a petal. Meaning that in the fith image another petal will grow on the last flower and the middle flower will lose another. Its a life cycle
@@hattchetman_2128 Ignoring any petal gains throughout the sequence only 1 petal is lost per turn. For B to be correct you would have to lose 2 petals that turn which is not shown to occur in turns 2, 3 or 4. Also not enough evidence to suggest a pattern of -1,-1,+1,-1. You would need about 10 turns to create logical certainty with that pattern.
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question 13 was literally binary code, this was the most obvious way of solving. Josh had a point but it could not be made up out of the recent figures. There was not enough information to confirm that it would happen since it also 'grows' back. With binary it is like 001 = 1, 010 = 2, 011 = 3, 100 = 4, 101 = 5, 110 = 6, 111 = 7 etc. This is the same in the picture actually.
yeah but there are 3 possible states. this lead me to think ternary and then I realised it went 0, 1, 2, 4... so thought the last one would be the equivalent of 8 so making it B but I guess not
It was ternary code, there are 3 states not 2. The order was 000, 001, 002, 011, 020 ( 0, 1, 2, 4, 6) and I still do not understand what the argument for 6 is
20:52 For the petal question, I went from right to left. You can see a petal moving from the left flower to the middle flower. That’s why the answer is A
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In number 13, when we talked about patterns, it should be a consistent or a fixed change. Since the pictures dont have a consistent pattern, in some cases that there are no patterns seen, we resort to counting the number of elements in the figure instead. So basically the amount of elements in the figure is 4, so in the choices, we cancel out all answer without the 4 elements and thats how I got my answer.
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22:26 Vik was right on the 13th question thats the logic behind it. Half of a leaf moves one step to the right out of the screen so at the end you get A. Firstly half of the 3rd one is out then the other half. Then half of the 2nd leaf goes to the right then the other half making the shape from A
they aren't moving off the screen though, it's the same 3 flowers. I don't know why Vik thinks they are moving off the screen, cause that actually doesn't make any sense. The pattern is that the far right flower loses its petals, then the middle flower loses one petal while the far right one grows one back. so given that the far right flower lost all its petals before growing any back, the only possible answer would be A where the middle flower loses all its petals and the far right one grows them all back.
@@logodrumline14 You can look at it like a section of a longer series. There are many ways to visualise it as long as it makes logical sense. You can visualise it as, each flower is borrowing half a petal per slide to another flower on the right which has no petals until it itself has no petals left and the series continues.
as someone already detailed in the comments these pattern recognition questions dont just have 1 awnser only because you dont have enough proof, but in case youre wondering the flower pattern (i also did what josh did) in the 3 flowers alligned: flower 3 LOSES half the other 2 remain » Flower 3 Loses other half, other 2 remain » flower 3 REGAINS 1 half back, flower 2 loses a half, flower 1 remains » (awnser wanted) Flower 3 regains 2nd half, flower 2 loses another half, flower 1 remains. It would continue to Flower 3 probably remains intact or loses another half, flower 2 regains 1 half, flower 1 loses a half.
I got 11, my logic for the flower one was the same as josh’s 😬
i was confident in 13 got 14 rightz cuz u guessed correct on the “lp cd and cassette” one
If they did the MAT or UKMT they’d hate the maths questions 😂
⚠️DO NOT CLICK ⚠️ ON THE LINK ABOVE ⚠️
Same here
got 11 aswell lol
for once, jj is actually *smart* for not taking this test.
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@@ItzMalick no
Very nice comment lmao
I perpetually believe that irony exists.
Hes taking time to recover after the diss track by ol mate 😂
JJ's absent not because he's training, but because they already knew he'd fail! 😂
What?
You really butchered that comment
Bruh jj is smarter then Ethan and Ethan there lmao
He did an iq test on his channel
I was about to SAY THAT!!😂😏
I literally saw the exact same pattern as Josh for question 13. I was so confident so i actually felt his confusion when it wasn't right and no one wanted to listen
I don’t the exact way vic was thinking, it doesn’t really make sense still but it was correct somehow 😂😂😂
@@TheJuanKerr Nah it makes sense, I thought of it the exact same way
@@gabrielhernandez8483 nah it doesnt make sense because if it moved to the right there would be 1 photo with the petal only on the right side of the 3rd flower
Josh’s answer does not explain why the flowers get halved in the first place, Vic’s does
I still think it's C and now my head hurts 💀
With the flower one I got A. My working out was: you have to think of it organically. In the second slide the flower on the right is dying so disappears on the third slide. on the fourth slide the flower in the middle begins dying but the flower on the right is growing back. because of that, logically, the next slide would have the middle flower dead and the right flower grown back therefore A.
I got A from them moving to left as if they were on a conveyor. I don't know if it works but it worked in my head 🌝
That makes so much more sense that what they were saying
Exactly bro
thats exactly how i thought of it
My thoughts too!
Vik’s face through the whole video just shows how concentrated he is
Edit: Thanks for the likes guys
I’m Better Than MoreSidemen
Asian
@@lulpert1370 lol what
He’s a tryhard, wants to show off intelligence when really theres little there.
@@JackT19 why do you care?
About Josh and Vik and their respective #13: At Mensa (some IQ-organization) they teach you that people view things like these in different ways, because of different thinking patterns, caused by outer circumstances.
The "correct way" to view them is how Simon explains it - you imitate the movement of the whole picture and see it as states of things, that are changing.
Viks way is very interesting because its the moving way: In his head there is an invisible row of items around the shown part of the module. The #13 task is proposed with this in mind so both ways work.
Josh's way is in theory the same as the "correct way", but with him not imitating the movement of the whole picture, but looking at the transformation of individual items, thus leading to him being convinced its B. One would usually award half a point for this, because the thinking is right, but not concidering everything given in the module.
Hope this explains it, great banter in the vid, we all know Ethan simply has exam nerves.
I still don't get it. Simon says the Right pedal of the Third Flower dissapears for 2. But it is gone for all 3 After the first. So I don't get how the right pedal is coming back. I was having the same way as Josh. Because the right Pedal never came back for the following Pictures and therefore the logical step, that the Right one can come back didn't Occur to me. The Left one came back yeah, but never the right one.
How exactly am I supposed to see that? Or could you help me find the logic in the right pedal coming back?
I saw what Josh was saying haha
@@TheMGlock the way I saw it was, the right petal leaves then the left petal leaves. After they've both left they start coming back first the left one then the right one. The reason you know the right one is coming back is because the left one came back. This process happens to the flowers going from right to left.
The third flower just loses both petals then starts growing them back as the second flower starts losing petals
@@ghostlord5611 Interesting way of looking at it.
So going away is right to left and coming back is left to right. OK.
I still think I wouldn't get to that conclusion at the End, but thanks for that :)
I dont like how quickly they dismissed Josh's logic simply because it was the wrong answer. My guy made valid points and i actually agree with him.
but it’s wrong so u cant agree
@@VOTVRe it does make sense. When there's a half of a flower, it dissappears in the next one. So when there 2 halves, the next one would have 2 flowers dissappear.
@@kieranodonnell640 in Slide 4 the half comes back. Joshs pattern doesnt explain why that happens but Viks does
@@kieranodonnell640 it doesn’t work because that doesn’t explain why it becomes a half in the first place or an even bigger flaw of how it comes back
Same, that was my answer for that question as well. I didn't get the "correct" answer logic at all
I was with Josh 💯 on question 13, I saw exactly the same answer, wrong but made sense in my head lol
yeah josh made complete sense, but they used plants to illustrate so you are made to think that the half-plant is regrowing instead of dying because it just died.
@@bigboipeepee He didn't account for half of the petal coming back, so it didn't make complete sense.
@@bigboipeepee I saw what Josh said but this is a good explanation. I just didn't see them as plants
@@lionclaws1880 say we call the petals A1,A2,B1,B2,C1,C2 as we go across. In the first photo C2 disappears, then both C petals disappear. Then B2 and C2 disappear, then all of the B and C petals disappear. After that, A2,B2 and C2 would disappear, then finally all the petals would be gone.
Nah cuz that’s not a self sustaining pattern - there is no pattern to when it loses half a petal so it’s just a smart observation, it’s a smart last-ditch attempt if you can’t find out the actual answer but it was wrong ig 🤷🏾♂️
Ethan shouldn't be so hard on himself, he would've felt like a genius if KSI was there 😂
he’s like the same level or even worse at least ksi don’t look at others ans
@@negahuhh true Ksi went to a private school aswell If I’m not mistaken
@@hs.31zz going to a private school doesnt make you smarter though.
@@negahuhh I don’t think so. Ethan openly admits when sucks at something. JJ does not. And let me remind you, this is not a real IQ test. If you take an actual IQ test, you will not see questions like this. You will get cubes etc. which you’ll have to solve yourself just by looking at pictures, and you will get questions, but your points depend on your answer to each question. No answer is wrong when you take an IQ test, because they ask you what YOU THINK is the correct answer. These “IQ tests” online are made for fun. You can get 0 correct answers on these kind of IQ tests and still have a high IQ, because IQ tests are more than figures and questions. There are IQ tests with maths, physics, chemistry, biology, geography, IT, reaction time etc. If you ask a chemist about IT engineering he’s OPT to fail. The same can be used on these kind of IQ tests.
@@0m4r21o I took the Mensa IQ test which is the most standardised one and it's very much like this video, with a few other types of questions. Only you get like 2 hours or something to answer many more questions, and you lose marks for wrong answers.
for the flower question: i was thinking of them more as shapes than flowers, so josh’s answer makes sense if you think the second shape is donating half of itself to the last shape (which is gone).
Then the established rule is: shapes can only donate when the flower is completely gone. With this logic the last flower wouldn’t ever become whole because the second flower can’t donate it’s remaining half, and instead both flowers would fall. leaving B as the answer.
But if you think of it as regenerating flowers (like a life cycle) A makes more sense. Depends on how you contextualize it.
U should imagine it as days, each picture is a day, so day all leafs are there, day 2 one flower loses one leaf, day 3 the flower loses another leaf, but day 4 the one flower grows one back and another loses one. So it makes sence that the one that just lost one will lose another one. Since the other flower grew one back i figured it should grow another one back as well. That is probably what the quiz wanted u to think
Yes with that logic it can be both A or B
I don’t know I saw it as A instantly I just thought it was obvious but maybe I’m weird
The way to simplify the petals is to turn it into a number sequence, the third flower for example if I remember correctly is 2, 1, 0 , 1, 2. It must be full come the final picture
Or you just use halves as a transitional between full and none. As 3rd was at none and 2nd was at full before half transitional, it'll be the opposite afterwards, hence FNF
F is to H, where H is to N. N is to H, where H is to F
FFF - FFH - FFN - FHH - FNF
Josh mate don’t worry question 13 i was with you on the whole pattern thing 😂 goes half then disappears 😂
First the 3rd flower moves both of it pedals to the right off the screen one by one, then the middle flower moves both if its pedals to the 3rd pedals spot one by one :)
if the pattern kept going, then the first flower would be next in moving both of its pedals to the middle slot
But both of them got half, which meant one was coming back while the other was going away. It wasnt hard 😂
The case for A should have been in slide 4 the petal on the right most flower should have been to the right of the stem indicating that it is in a different state than what we know about flowers with half petals from previous knowledge ie that they "die" , the logic for B is much more sound,,, but take it with a pinch of salt it's an internet "IQ test" so accuracy isn't really a thing on those
Simon low-key would be a great host for a T-V show tho 😂
Who tf puts a dash between the T and V in TV?
never seen someone say T-V before
Can tell he proper enjoys hosting too
High-key
get rid of Neymar
Sidemen always find a way to make me feel smart while entertaining me
I’m better than MoreSidemen
First human reply.
nah this vid was trash
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@@I_quit_trolling_now good for u
Ethan is hilarious, if you know 4 other words and they are not the answer, surely its the one you dont know
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That's literally common sense... it's the basic process of elimination 🗿
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I got 12/15 however I did work out question 13 exactly like josh did and it boggled my brain that it didn’t make sense to anyone else 😂😂
I got 12 too, the flower one got me and I thought indulgent was as in "I indulge in beverages." So I put reckless. I also don't know what a LP is so I picked the diagram that had them side by side, one leading into the next.
I got 9 but i got the flower one right because the third flower disappears then second starts to lose one leaf but the third dtarts to grow again.
In terms of intelligence, Simon is very underrated. He's a logical and aware thinker compared to the rest and probably the smartest one there. No offence to the rest of the boys lol
vik scored one less than him with a timer
Vikk is smarter
@@sanatk.2883 He also did with timer he said
@@joshranimal2292 Vik is mainly booksmart. He's not very logical or creative like Simon or harry. He's got a very childlike mindset and hes less aware than the others. Josh also has a little bit of that characteristic as well. Not a bad thing if you're wondering thats just their way of thinking
Harry is! He is very bright and enthusiastic!
ethan being the backbench kid just in his own world while others r in the class lmaoo love it
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Beep, bop... I'm the Philosophy Bot. Here, have a quote:
"For a man to conquer himself is the first and noblest of all victories"
~ Plato
that 11+ prep coming in clutch💀
fr
The non-verbal test🤣
@@King_JKM don’t even those bloody shapes were acc the bane of my childhood man
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I remember when I realised that the 11+ was just an IQ test
I got you.
21:00 let's assume it's a plant and got eaten by a bug.
Bug eats the right plant in 2 full steps. 1 leaf at a time.
So till the 3rd step the bug ate the whole right plant.
Then the bug goes to the centre plant and eats it(one leaf at a time), in the meantime the right plant starts growing back one leaf at a time.
So till the 4th step bug has eaten 1 leaf from the centre plant and an older leaf has regenerated on the right plant.
Thus in the 5th step the centre plant will be fully eaten and the right plant would've fully regenerated.
I’m glad Simon shared his score with us - smartest Sidemen but we been knew
The amount of time Behz looks over at Vik’s board 😂
Respect the hustle and trying
And still last what a desastor of a brain it shows
@@bibosstube3262 disaster not desastor, seems like your brain isnt so well either lol
@@fuhh5063 "(edited)" 💀
@@de3p601 my guy probably typed "desaster" 😂
The logic Josh has for the flower one was the same as mine I just thought that the pattern was the right side petal on the furthest right flower goes away then the left petal go away then it shows both the middle and right side flower have the right side petal missing and I thought the pattern repeated as in this time instead of only the right side flower both the middle and right side flower follow the pattern together
I think the problem with this is that it isn't a series, because there is no connection between the third one and the forth one and than it's just two different cases with the same relation
I chose A for the flower one but while they were still choosing I also said “couldn’t it be B?” Because the pattern could be “Starting from the right most flower: flowers lose their petals from right to left until there aren’t any petals left on it. Once the flower to your right loses a petal, you begin losing a pedal from right to left and all the previous flowers gain their left petal back. Once the flower to your left loses all its petals you also lose all your petals.” So basically if “B” was the next frame, then the following frame after that would be all flowers with only their left petal, and the frame after that would be all flowers with no petals.
I agree with Josh on the petal one. Did exactly the same.
@MoreSdiemen 🅥 Why You tryna fool people bro
It’s because the petal on the right is growing back again
I’m Better Than MoreSidemen
same
@@clennis8137 Didn’t look at it that way, but it does make sense. Tbh with iq tests thats based on images and patterns there’s usually multiple answers possible just depending on the logic you’re using.
I see what Josh meant: the pattern in the "stalk" was full, half, empty. In the first cycle, the 3rd stalk went full, half, empty. So logically, when the 2nd and 3rd stalk was half, the next would be both being empty ie Option B.
But it is a series, and from the 3rd picture to the 4th picture there is no correlation. Hence, there must be a different reasoning. So B is not right.
How is the other one right though? Cause the correct one makes even less sense than Josh's
@@andreimarita9766 if you view each flower as individual, when it dies it goes full, half, empty and then it starts to regrow again giving the whole pattern full, half, empty, half, full which is what we see on the rightmost flower. you get answer A by applying this pattern to the middle flower
Ohh gotcha. You gotta think of it as an actual flower not just a pattern
@@huntervilhauer3341 You have to look at every flower separate. First flower is full, full, full, full, so the first flower in box 5 has to be full. Third flower is full, half, empty, half, so is has to be full.
With the information that 1 and 3 have to have full flowers the only option is A.
@@andreimarita9766 no, the furthest right petal disappears. There is only 3 stems, none move off the screen. Vik doesn’t explain his thoughts well
Josh is right for the petal one, also feel like simon should include himself in the moresidemen videos as i feel like it would of been harder to get 14 with the pressure of time and everyone there ect
I’m better than MoreSidemen
good thing he got 13 then init
@@I_quit_trolling_now ur a virgin
Saying josh is right for that one is silly if that is right then any could be right
Josh wasn't right
For the petals, you can have two alternating patterns so the first pattern shown in squares 1 and 3 is a decrease by 1 flower while another pattern in 2 and 4 is the right petal disappears from right to left. That would leave B as the answer.
Bro I said B too. I was wrong. I just shoved it in, didn't explain the last one
That’s wrong but good effort
I thought it was A as the number of petals in each of the pictures were not less than 4
its not wrong, just a diff way of looking at it. the answer could have been A or B, just depends how u look at it@@MrEarwick42
23:00 Tobi looks like a man who is rethinking his life right now after getting a lower score than Harry on an IQ test lmaooo
@@Mr.NiiceGuy I know. I'm only kidding haha
I’m better than MoreSidemen
Just noticed 😂😂😂
Lol I was testing myself and I had the same reaction at the end. I thought I would be good at these things.
i got 9/15 bro im so shit
Played along myself and got 13, really entertaining and enjoyable to hear the logic of the others
same
same
same
I’m better than MoreSidemen
Same
For the people struggling with the petal one, each individual flower has it's own 'life cycle' whereby it completely dies as well as completely reforms itself petal by petal directly following it's death, this begins after the flower to it's right dies (halfway point of the lifecycle). The 4th sequence in the pattern suggests this to be the case given the presence of the petal that had previously been removed from the third flower, thus suggesting a cycle pattern.
thnxx
ooooh that makes sense. I saw it as the end of an arrow
Nerd
Thanks, this was the only one I got wrong and couldn't understand, and u made it really easy to understand
exactly
seeing vikks serious face makes me laugh
Nah, i 100% agree with josh on The flowers, that makes perfect sense
same
Same here 😭💔
I’m better than MoreSidemen
If the first image was not there then it does make sense.
But it doesn't.
If that was the case then the first image would have to be duplicated for that logic to work
Here is a possible explanation to 13.
1) Focus on just the flower on the right and count the petals. It goes 2,1,0,1 implying that the fifth picture will have 2 petals on the right most flower.
2) Once the flower on the right most has 0 petals, the middle flower starts losing petal which would mean in the fifth picture, the middle flower should have no petals.
3) If there were more pictures to this, I would imagine, the leftmost flower would lose petals once the middle flower reaches 0 petals.
The first point is the best explanation. You have to arithmetise the pictures, to the 2,1,0,1 sequence. I think that's what Vikk did he just explained it horribly hahaha
This is the best way to solve it. It's a technique that translates to any problem similar to this. Making them extremely easy to solve as you can basically solve the problem with half the images and the most basic of maths, instead of making it into a convuluted thought experiment
It's the case with most of these problems, and why IQ tests are so bad (worked most tricks out myself when I was young, and ended up with SAT scores way higher than I should have had). Another trick is for the cubes. It's to pretend you're holding the left most square and pull it right until it connects with the right most square. This on its own will basically force your brain to solve the cube problems bascially straight away. Becaue then you only have to visualise 2 squares of the cube and not 6. Even if your brain can't handle the visualisation quickly, it'll still make them easier to solve
best explanation
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I see how you got your YT name
Simon is low-key the smartest. Maybe not mathematically like Vik, but he’s incredibly logical and quick witted, and thinks outside the box. When somebody says something, Simon would make a well made, well thought out joke quickly in response. That alone shows his capacity of brainpower.
I think brainpower has to include creativity, though. I'm not sure Simon is an "outside the box" thinker. He's entrepreneurial and he plays devils advocate well but he's too straight-laced and diplomatic to be truly creative. Also, having quick-wit is overrated because that's about reaction-time and doesn't really matter outside of social scenarios
@@johnjungkook2721 reaction time? i think thats the wrong thing to call that
@@johnjungkook2721 man said reaction time bro it aint a sport
No it just means he knows how to articulate himself. That is not comparable to brainpower.
@@johnjungkook2721 "reaction time" 😂😂😂😂
I think he's smart in social situations.
Vik was definitely getting the answer for question 4 with all that focus
Love vikks logic on the flower answer, got the same answer but thought of it in a completely different way.
Hi It’s finally here ruclips.net/video/nySFa7D11q8/видео.html
Leaf pattern was -1,-1,+1,+1 once the flower had no petals i.e after step 2 the pattern repeats for the next flower on the left. The next one in the series after that would be 1,1,2 petals.
@@TheJamsplat it actually could be 1,1,1 petal aswell . not only 1,1,2
You can invent a rule to make any of the answers correct, and in my opinion none of the rules are simple enough to make one of them overwhelmingly more obvious.
For A to be correct, the rules could be: If any flowers have only one petal, that petal moves to the next flower on the right. If no flowers have only 1 petal, the rightmost petal moves to the next flower. And if there is no flower on the right, the petal just disappears.
For B: If a flower has only 1 petal, it falls off. If a flower has 0 petals, 1 grows back. If no flowers have only 1 petal, the rightmost full flower loses 1 petal.
For C: Anytime a full flower loses a petal, the second petal will fall off next round. If a flower has no petals, 1 will grow back and the flower stays that way forever. The first time a flower loses a petal can be random, either way the C is the only option that can happen with this rule set.
D: The leftmost lone petal moves to the next flower on the right. If no flowers have only one petal, the rightmost existing petal moves to the right. If a flower has 2 petals for 4 consecutive turns, both of that flower's petals fall off.
E: the right flower has a repeating 2-1-0-1 pattern. The middle flower has a repeating 2-2-2-1-1-1-0-0-0 pattern. The left flower has a repeating 2-2-2-2-0-0-0-0 pattern.
All of these rule sets could be viable and all of them are on similar levels of simplicity. Why is only one of them correct?
@@MattMcConaha You need to have enough information to support a repeatable pattern for those answers. Flower 1 must have 2 flowers. In the sequence Flower 2 did not lose a petal the same turn that Flower 3 had 0 petals so this removes C, D and E from the possible answers. Then you have the fact that in no point in the sequence do you lose more that 1 petal across all 3 flowers per turn(ignoring any gains). For B to be correct you would have to lose 2 petals. Based on the provided information there is nothing to suggest that you can lose two petals per turn.
Also no petal moves between flowers at any point. To indicate to the reader that petals are shared between flowers then on the 4th picture Flower 3 would have had a petal on the right side not the left to give a visual indication that a petal has moved from 1 flower to another. These test are based on logical reasoning not logical guesses.
9:21 Simon using Mr. Beast’s idea of incorporating the ad within his game is awesome to see come to fruition after he talked about it on his What’s Good? Podcast w/ Randy
For the flower it's literally as someone named it "life cycle" as in they're all full until one is only half in the second pattern meaning it lost one petal, on the next pattern the right one lost all of its petals and by the time it grows one back in the last pattern, it's the turn of the middle flower to lose its petals, that's why the answer is A bc the logic sequel is that the middle one lose it second petal while the right one gets its other petal and become full again xD
That's how I looked at it but not so many big words
Mine was that the middle one was helpful and gave its petals to the one with no petal😂
Exactly
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You can't be sure based on the pictures given that it grows back to a full flower though. There is no logic then.
This means that you have to make an assumption, but if you are supposed to make assumptions, you might as well assume the logic behind the series is just that it's random, making all the answers correct.
I'm 6 months late, but everyone's logic was so different from mine for the flowers, and I got it A. You have 3 flowers. The flowers are wilting/dying from right to left and then growing back. The flower doesn't start wilting until the flower to its right dies. Start with 3 healthy flowers (Left Mid Right), 1: LMR Healthy, 2: R starts to die, 3: R dies, 4: M starts to die and R starts to grow, 5: M dies and R blooms.
I did not expect to get 14 of them. I chose A for the flowers one (question 13) because the first flower is always fully intact, so that narrowed it down to A or B. Then I eliminated B because the third flower loses a "petal" twice, so it should gain a petal twice again
CAP
@@hattchetman_2128 nah I got 14 as well, the only one I missed was the flower one though
Finally someone else who understands it well lol. I found it more confusing how people thought the flower on the right would lose its last and only petal again.
you came at the right conclusion but your logic is flawed. because your sentence"because the first flower is always fully intact" isnt correct. casue the sixt figure would be 1 petal 1 petter 2 petals. or 1 petal, 1 petal, 1 petal. meaning that the first flower won't always stay intact
yes thank you 🙌🏻🙌🏻
These make me so happy, after a long day of school! Thank you Sidemen, haven’t missed a video in years!
Homie it’s August 💀💀
@@DYoungMoney yea and everyone goes to school in September right? 🤦♂️
Which school u goin summer
@@shxdmxn8950 it's not summer everywhere in the world
@@DYoungMoney I started school like weeks ago 😑
can we just talk about how harry is smart but in a comedian type of way
No
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I agree with Josh on question 13! I think the test go it wrong.. I figured it the same exact way Josh did. That is absolutely a pattern.
It only answers half of the problem. That logic explains why a flower disappears but not why they become a half in the first place
No it isn’t. Because why did the third flower grow a petal in the first place. Josh is just ignoring the fact that that happened.
The solution to that question is that you have think of it organically. Think of each step as like a day. In a day the right flower loses a petal. In the second day the right flower loses its second petal. On the third day the flower in the middle loses a petal and the right flower grows one. So on the fourth day which is the sequence we have to guess the flower in the middle loses its second petal and the right flower regrows its second petal. Thats why it is A. So these logical rules follow: If a flower on your right loses all its petals then on the next day you will lose one petal, the flower on your right will gain one. On the day after that you will lose your second one.
@@MiloMcCarthyMusic agreed
@@itislamin With the ”correct” answer your solution makes perfect sense. However given only the pattern in question, answer B would be correct aswell. It is a flawed question with 2 correct answers but only 1 gives you a point.
We all expected Vik to carry and he did.
I mean he is the smartest sidemen
@@Transla11 simon had 14/15
@@LD-cn6yf 13/15
@@LD-cn6yf doesn’t matter lmao even Simon knows Vik is smarter than him
But he probably didnt do it with a timer
For number 13, I understand Josh’s logic because I also put down the same answer, but the reason we got it wrong was because from picture to picture, only half of a petal is removed, but going from the last picture to the answer B, it removed 2 halves of a petal (or a full petal) so it doesn’t logically follow from the previous pictures.
it does tho because it loses a half but it shows it regrowing and since it loses a petal every turn it’s right to assume it’ll grow the next turn like it did (if u understand what i’m trying to say)
@@blazeprominence3287 Indeed. Starts from the right, loosing one by one every picture. When the right is done, the middle starts to loose its petals, while the right one grows again, one by one.
There are same number of petals in pictures 3 and 4.
@@MrUntti exactly that would make a illogical as well
@@valentinmanz4089 and also the pattern Josh said wouldn't work. As it would start as full flowers and end with 0-1 petals per every flower. With "dying" and regrowing the pattern can repeat itself indefinitely.
13 was dumb, because there are multiple ways to interpret that problem. I also got B, because it’s a repeating pattern. Following Josh’s logic, next one would be all 3 halved.
I did that in the first as well but in that logic the last pic doesn’t make sense
the 3rd flower was in the processing of reappearing so it would more logical to assume it would fully appear in the next pattern.
It cant be B as it doesnt reset, if the full completed 3 came back after C then it would have been B.
@@yeta. picture 3 was the 'reset' in my head, but since it can't really reset because that would mess up the pattern, I thought it was B :(
I’m better than MoreSidemen
Vik is absolutely right about the flowers, just move leaves one by one (from right to left), moving them to the right to the next stalk (or off the screen when on the furthest stalk right). They don't move within the same stalk.
1. furthest leaf right moves to right (off screen)
2. second furthest leaf right moves right (off screen because it's the same stalk, can't move to another stalk so it's off)
3. third furthest leaf right moves to the next stalk on the right
4. fourth furthest leaf moves to the next stalk on the right,
leaving no leaves on the second stalk and the two leaves moved from the second stalk to the furthest right, leaving two leaves on the furthest right = answer A.
Or just be a mathematician and think of it like binary with three values per bit (i.e. ternary or trinary), each stalk being a bit and the number of leaves representing the bit value from 0-2, and do like a weird arithmetic bit shift right twice per bit. (yes I know that's not how it works)
222 -> 221 -> 220 -> 211 -> 202.
Also, Josh's explanation of stalks with only one leaf "die" makes sense otherwise, but it doesn't explain the last one where a "dead" stalk gets a new leaf and then dies again. that's only thinking two steps at a time, not accounting for the whole sequence.
22:26
How I worked that our is :
Just looking at the 3rd stem so the order of the stems are : Opened - Halved - disappeared - Halved again - opened again
So if u just see the 4th image then which is : opened - Halved - Halved (again) so the following will be Opened - disappeared - opened (again)
Also only when the leaves on stem disappears then the stem before it changes that's why the 1st stem didn't changed and will change in the next iteration
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Bro ethan's laugh and overall energy gets me every time.
Is this sarcasm?
@@spammail3217 what
Vikks laugh is so contagious😂😂
It's one of the least contagious out of them 7 lol just because he's nice doesn't mean he's funny
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@@jv_matos - what's his laugh got to do with whether he's funny or not? No correlation.
@@jv_matos who mentioned about him being funny or not
@@jv_matos Agreed
Josh’s reasoning was sound - these tests can have multiple interpretations and the ‘correct’ answer is usually what what the examiners have decided
Here’s what Josh was trying to say
- 1 flower halves then disappears
- 2 flowers half
- by his logic 2 should disappear
In this model the next sequence would then be
3 flowers half
3 disappear
joshs reasoning was completely false hahahaha
@@NidokingOtsutsuki no. it says by logic but not everyone uses the same logic so its a flawed question. there isnt an objective answer. its completely subjective
Bro I said B too. I was wrong. I just shoved it in, didn't explain the last one
@@lewis0705 there ABSOLUTELY is an objective answer. The flowers petals are moved to the right 1 by 1. Josh's logic didn't even work, it didn't even begin to explain how the petal just magically reappeared, which he admitted and then shut up.
It's okay to be wrong, accepting it is the first step in correcting your wrongness.
@@NidokingOtsutsuki mate sorry to tell you but that's false too. Each plant will lose a leaf then another. Then it will grow a leaf back, and then another. It starts with the rightmost plant and then the middle plant, so the answer would be A because rightmost plant has grown both leaves back and the middle one has lost both. The next stage in the pattern would be they all have one leaf, assuming the pattern repeats, because rightmost would lose one again, middle would gain one back, and left would lose a leaf for first time.
Again, Simon being the host giving the guys a chance 🤣🤣🤣🤣
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For the stem one, if you simply think of it as a stem losing/regrowing leaves, it becomes intuitive. By the pictures, the third stem loses a leaf, and then proceeds to lose another leaf. Next, the second stem loses a leaf and the third stem begins to grow a leaf back. Next, you can filter it down to few possibilities, the second stem will lose a leaf (since it is in that phase), and the third stem will continue growing its final leaf back (since it is in the growing phase), using that logic, it follows that the second stem would have no remaining leaves and the third stem will have both of its leaves fully grown, that leaves the only options to be A or D, but it cannot be D as that implies that the first stem would have lost both of its leaves in a single iteration, which is not possible. Finally, option A is left.
Sorry for the long explanation, but it becomes extremely intuitive like this.
first comment I've seen that is following the logic that is set out in the question rather than them making up their own. Worked it out the same way mate!
I’m better than MoreSidemen
Exactly what I thought. The Sidemen are just making the question more difficult😂
@@geckorin yes and not changing the pattern mid way, it's not a relation its a pattern.
Yeah I had something like this but I couldn’t explain it. I knew things were going away and then coming back in halves so I picked a but wasn’t sure exactly why
Ended up with 13/15. Got 5 and 6 wrong, I related the two animals to themselves rather than with the answer so reached Hamster / Dog and I totally forgot what pragmatic meant lol. For 13 I imagined the petals moving to the right if there was no stem to latch onto, so I reached answer A in that way. Really fun to go through these with the guys. I struggled a lot on the 1st cube, i had to pause for a bit to visualize it in my head properly, I imagine if I was in the seat with them I would have gotten it wrong.
same but I got 2 and 4 wrong (2nd guessed #2)
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I got 14/15, the cassette cd question made no sense to me, and still doesn't. I thought about hamster/dog for a long time but I realised that it was more likely to be owl/bird because owls are carnivorous and cats probably eat birds because they are like mice with wings. I also had no clue what pragmatic meant but I knew it wasn't any of the others so I guessed.
Same here. Got all of them right except for the one with pragmatic (didn’t know what that meant), and the owl - bird one
I got 13 too but I paused to take more time for the questions as most people probably did so we had it easier
I understand where Josh is coming from for 13, I did the same thing.
The 6th petal is removed, and in the next image so is its counterpart.
Next image the 6th and 4th petals are removed, so logically so would both of their counterparts.
I kinda understand why A is right but tbh it's not a very good question when two of the answers make good sense. Imo, knowing how both work I still think B is the more logical option, moving the image perspective is a trick to me, not an intelligence test. Kinda why IQ tests mean nothing unless done by a professional and even then the results aren't important lmao. I got 12/15 so I'm a happy man today but question 13 is the only one I got wrong where I didn't slap my knee and go "oooooohhhhhhhh i seeeee"
All good fun though, good video
I thought the same at first too i chose B but looking back it’s the life cycle of a plant so it makes more sense it’s just not obvious that those are plants i thought they were the butts of arrows lol
Nothing explains its a plant, ao it is more logical to assume B is correct
I got 12 and for the leaves question vik is correct the leaves are moving right., 1st order - the far right branch is getting empty (which was shown in 2 steps)
2nd order the middle one is getting empty but when the moving right they have an empty branch to move rather than going away from the box the shifts to that) so in the next step the middle one will become empty and both leaves will shift to far right one.,
So option A shows that.,
As per the series . The 3rd order the far left brach will loose leaves and in first step one will move to the middle one., so the first will have 1, second will have one and third one will still have 2., also in the next step the first branch will become empty and both leaves will shift to middle one., so the first one will have none, the middle one will have 2, and third one will have 2.
Hope the explanation was easy to understand.,
Thank you for the explanation..
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I didn't read it though 😸
I just wanna say I LOVE these type of videos, KEEP IT UP
Watching Behz in this is the hardest I’ve laughed in ages
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Josh is right for choosing the B option on the 13th question.
Explanation: In 2nd photo the 3rd stripe reduces to half, then in the 3rd photo it reduces fully.
Following the same pattern now 2nd & 3rd stripes both of them get reduced to half of their size so next obviously they'll be reducing fully in 4th frame.
Simon the best host for these type of videos🐐
I’m better than MoreSidemen
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For #2 i picked C because Cassette and CD shares a letter, CD and LP shares length but Cassette and LP shares nothing. For #6 I also picked C since hamster and mouse is roughly same size and cat and dog is roughly same size. The only one I got wrong and literally couldn't have gotten right was last one but tbf my native language isn't english so it doesn't surprise me...
yo same
You could arguably make each of those diagrams work
JJ doing all of the solo reacts probably makes him think he doesn’t have to do these 😂
I have been binge watching through sidemen videos , and we have to see a new update iq test from the sidemen , or we love seeing the activity’s that involve the tv , bc a lot of us audience are in school / studying and it’s just fun to see sidemen doing , guess the country games / iq tests , guess the emoji or guess the link , we enjoy and it brings a laughter and comfort well we are studying!! , definitely need a update on iq tests that would be fun 🧡
Love these videos keep this up 🔝
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The correct solution of question 13:
The petals are worth x3 for the left flower, x2 for the middle flower and x1 for the right flower. Slide 1 = 2x3 + 2x2 + 2x1 = 12. Slide 2: 2x3 + 2x2 + 1x1 = 11. Slide 3: 2x3 + 2x2 + 0x1 = 10. Slide 4: 2x3 + 2x1 + 1x1 = 9. The pattern is that for each new slide, the value drops by 1. The correct answer must then be a slide adding up to 8. Thus slide A must be correct (2x3 + 0x2 + 2x1 = 8).
This explanation is interesting. I literally just said “well, seems like there can’t be more than 2 missing petals at a time,” and went with the only answer that fit. Got it right lol
@@LJsBed fair deuce wow now that’s thinking out the box
this actually makes more sense to me than any other explanation in the comment section
22:26 okay Vikk…This sequence basically shows that each plant has 2 leaves and (starting from the right most plant) as one plant loses a leaf, another plant will have to gain a leaf. The twist here is that one plant can’t have more than 2 leaves therefore, in order for a plant to gain a leaf, the plant will have to lose one. As shown in the 3rd box, the rightmost plant has no leaves left so it can now gain a leaf thus the 4th box. As this sequence moves in a right to left order, the answer will be A because the rightmost plant gains a leaf and the middle one loses one leaf (leaving it with 0 leaves)
I contest this,
I clearly understand your logic, but if the leaf by the right disappears first, on what logic do you say the leaf by the left appears first?. I strongly believe the illustration lacks enough proof to approve of that as an actual progression.
Y'all the answer is far simpler and does not involve life and death. The pattern is that each consecutive image can be made from the previous image by changing the location of exactly one petal. If you look at the the 4th image versus the options, all options except for A require more than 1 petal to be moved from the fourth image to make the final image. A is the only correct answer.
@@cutecub1495 Man said life and death 😅😅😅🤣.
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For the flower one, here’s MY OPINION (I may be wrong):
Firstly, the far right flower, sheds one half off. Then, sheds another off.
Next, the middle flower sheds one half off, BUT the previous flower has regrown one.
From this, I assumed that the middle flower will then lose its other half, and then the far right flower will regrow another half.
Therefore, A is the answer.
22:31
13. When you remove one petal of the flower the flower on the right gains one petal
Question 13, I worked it out as after one turn of the flower being fully gone it regrows a petal, or you can look at it as the sequence can never have less than 4 petals on the board so as it takes away from one side it slowly adds another to the open space where it wasn’t taken from.
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To respond to question 13, which is a classic psychometric test question, the arrow on the left stays static the whole way through. That disregards C, D and E. The arrow on the right interchanges from whole, to half, to none, to half, to whole, which gives you the answer of A. The middle arrows show inconclusive patterns to draw a narrative from. Josh's argument would be valid if the first image didn't exist, but his logic doesn't follow the trend.
For question 13, I treated it like Binary numbers. Furthest right flower, each petal removed is +1. Middle flower, each petal is +2. So the pattern reads 0,1,2,3, then the answer is A cause removing the 2 middle petals = 4. None of the others do = 4. Ill explain firther if people still dont understand but Binary numbers is pretty fun to learn. '0's and '1's 😅
not really binary though because each flower has 3 states meaning the canonical counting system would be ternary
Simon coming up with the bangers
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I feel like a lot of "IQ test" questions are faulty in that they are written as if there is a single difinitive answer when there really isn't. The first question, yeah, A was the definitive answer. The second question, no. Here's why each answer could be correct:
A: the three entities are separate things with some unique qualities, so some amount of each circle will be non-overlapping. CD and LP overlap because they both have similar disc shape and the data is stored in a spiral shape. LP and Cassette overlap because they both store their data in analog. CD and Cassette overlap because they were both designed to be portable and were frequently played back on mobile systems. All three overlap because they all commonly store music files. You can come up with different reasons they overlap (e.g. Cassettes and CDs are commonly rewritable) but you can definitely come up with relationships that work.
B: I'm personally finding it hard to come up with an explanation that I am happy with, but explanations surely can be made depending on how you interpret the question. Maybe something like each format relies on different technology. LP's are mechanical, cassettes are magnetic, CDs are digital.
C: The diagram represents albums which were released while each medium was considered "standard." LPs existed before either of the other two, but had some overlap with cassettes. CDs overlapped with the end of cassettes, but LPs were out before CDs were invented. You could pose an argument that LPs and cassettes are still being released, but I'd counter with an argument that the diagram represents when the formats were "standard" and even though albums may continue to be released on a specific format that doesn't mean the format is standard.
D: The size of the circle indicates the amount of time a certain format has existed. LPs are the large circle, cassettes the medium circle, CD's are the small circle. Basic as that, each circle represents the relationship of how long each format existed. You could say the overlapping nature represents an overlap in the time when they exist, I don't think that explanation is necessary.
Anyway, that concludes my explanation. A meaningful IQ test either won't have this ambiguity or will score people based on their ability to find logical connections instead of asserting a single thing to be the difinitively correct answer.
If you see it as a Venn Diagramm, with pure set theory: no Cassettes are LPs, no LPs are CDs, no CDs are cassettes, thus B. They seemed to want you to say "Some albums are released in each format, but not all in every format, but a few in all three, which is A". Not a good question, IMO. (And I usually test extremely well in IQ tests.)
I got C based on the properties of the words.
- CD and cassette have in common the characteristic of beginning with C
- CD and LP share the characteristic of being two letter initialisms.
I honestly didn't even consider the meanings!
It's inaccurate if they belong to different community and are quite young.
Harry is actually so underrated when it comes to test like these and intelligence in general, i've noticed most of the time he ends up with good results
cause he is good at random facts he isnt good at math or science
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Question 13. The petals move down 1 flower stem at a time. And flip horizontally once on their way to the next stem
For the flower one the flowers are dying and regrowing. The third flower starts to die and then stars to grow. So on the fourth panel the second and third flower look the same but are on different stages of the cycle with the third flower growing while the second one is dying. Definitely confusing but that is why A is correct.
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You already know JJ would have guessed C for all of them 😂 😂 😂
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Ethan is the guy everyone needs. Bro gives compliments left and right, funny af
Easily the most rounded sideman
I’m Better Than MoreSidemen
@@WFKGW is that a fat joke?
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@@igorj7780 he’s not even fat anymore bro 😂
In question 2, i feel like C would also be a possible correct answer, thinking that the box represented the music factor. Then an LP can be on both a CD and a Cassette. I kinda dont see how a Cassette and a CD should overlap and they should be equals.
Thats a Venn diagram, the box wouldn't count.
I thought the second one should be B. I saw the box they're all in as representing physical music storage and each circle representing a different format. There's no overlap between any of the circles because there are no further similarities between any of those 3.
In fact I think A is wrong because of the three sections of overlap between each pair of two circles. What characteristic shared by a cassette and CD would fit in their shared space that isn't also a characteristics of an LP? Likewise for the other two overlap sections.
same brother..
They’re all music related but different things, making them 3 different circles with a common theme
@@YoungMulaBaby808 yes but there must also be correlation between each two individually
@@YoungMulaBaby808 exactly you right
@@incendium447 no I can't seem any the only relation they have is music storage devices which is the universal set ..but they themselves should be disjointed circles because all three are different mediums .
bruh vikk is so cute when he's doing the problem in his head 😭
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@@ItzMalick what?😂
Can't believe Mr. Knowledge wasn't here. He would've smoked everyone on the IQ test. He has an IQ of 165 as previously proven by him on his video.
for 13, the pattern is basically this:
- for every right side petal taken from a flower, give every other flower (except the flowers who's petal is being removed) a petal on the left side of their flower.
- for every left side petal taken from a flower, give every other flower (except the flowers who's petal is being removed) a petal on the right side of their flower.
- the right side petal is taken first from a flower, then the left side petal
- petals taken from a flower start from the rightmost flower , go to the middle flower then go to the leftmost flower and then the cycle repeats from the rightmost flower.
Here’s how the leaf one works and why it’s A (if someone hasn’t done it already)
The way to solve this is to consider each plant individually as a pattern and figure out at what point each pattern begins individually for each of the plants
The cycle of each is clearly: full - lose right - lose left - regrow right - regrow left - full
We can see the middle plant starts its rotation after the plant to its right loses all its leaves. Therefore after the fourth picture the furthest right would regrow it’s left leaf and the middle one would lose its left leaf as that is where they are in respect to the cycle above. The furthest left plant will start its rotation next turn as the plant to its right has now lost all its leaves (essentially it just remains the same). This leaves (no pun intended) you with answer A
Feel free to comment didn’t ask G if you like :)
This makes the most sense to me
This is a very good explanation tbh
I think you found an explanation that fits the answer but that's not how these types of logic questions work. They are looking for the simplest answer. The simplest answer is important here because otherwise there would be hundreds of subjective ways to answer this questions.
The simplest answer here is that each consecutive image can be made from the previous image by changing the location of exactly one petal. That's it.
If you look at the the 4th image versus the options, all options except for A require more than 1 petal to be moved from the fourth image to make the final image. A is the only correct answer.
There was no context so there is not a "Solid Solution". The question was just dumb.
@@cutecub1495 Yes, although this is true that only one petal will be moved in the shown pictures - wouldn’t that be random? How do you know this will be the case every time? The question states that this is a series and therefore the petals movements consequently can be predicted - I’m aware that you claim that they are looking for the “easiest answer” but that’s no excuse to say “one petal changes each time” as there is no series there.
The series I have proposed is not only a likely solution but also allows us to predict where the petals will be on picture 6,7,8,9 etc and therefore functions as a viable series. You may be correct in that it may not be the correct series… contextually we really have nothing to go from but, from what can be seen, the solution I’ve posted logically adheres to the definition of a series and is very simplistic to comprehend once explained.
Please disagree and pick apart this if you like!! I enjoy being proven wrong… sometimes…😂
Also… logic puzzles work by using logic, inherently, and I’m pretty sure that’s what I used?
1:30 Tobi's old intro song loool
22:20 Josh is actually right that there's another pattern, I thought exactly the same way
the flower question:
1. In each stage half a leaf is lost on ONE flower
2. If a flower has lost both halves of its leaf it will then grow them back after each stage, but this does not interfere with the loosing of half a leaf on other flowers.
Harry's been my favorite sidemen for years, and I'm happy to know that I got the same score as him!!!
I'm guessing JJ sat out of this one cause he knew what the result would be 😂
I got 13, used the same logic as Josh for the flowers:
Whenever there is only half a flower left it will disappear fully next round
It’s finally here ruclips.net/video/nySFa7D11q8/видео.html
It was -1,-1,+1,+1 when the flower had no more leaves the pattern started on the next flower to the left which is why it was A.
@@TheJamsplat It could have easily been B. its flawed because it's about how the creator wanted the pattern to be not the actual logic behind it
@@hattchetman_2128 I thought the same as you until I thought about it. In the second image the last flower loses a petal then in the third image it loses another. In the fourth image the middle flower loses a petal and the last flower grows a petal. Meaning that in the fith image another petal will grow on the last flower and the middle flower will lose another. Its a life cycle
@@hattchetman_2128 Ignoring any petal gains throughout the sequence only 1 petal is lost per turn. For B to be correct you would have to lose 2 petals that turn which is not shown to occur in turns 2, 3 or 4. Also not enough evidence to suggest a pattern of -1,-1,+1,-1. You would need about 10 turns to create logical certainty with that pattern.
Jj and deji in this video would be absolutely hilarious
FINALLY VIK WILL SHOW HIS REAL POWER
if there are questions about prime numbers, he's fucked.
Simon got higher
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question 13 was literally binary code, this was the most obvious way of solving. Josh had a point but it could not be made up out of the recent figures. There was not enough information to confirm that it would happen since it also 'grows' back. With binary it is like 001 = 1, 010 = 2, 011 = 3, 100 = 4, 101 = 5, 110 = 6, 111 = 7 etc. This is the same in the picture actually.
yeah but there are 3 possible states. this lead me to think ternary and then I realised it went 0, 1, 2, 4... so thought the last one would be the equivalent of 8 so making it B but I guess not
It was ternary code, there are 3 states not 2.
The order was
000, 001, 002, 011, 020
( 0, 1, 2, 4, 6)
and I still do not understand what the argument for 6 is
20:52 For the petal question, I went from right to left. You can see a petal moving from the left flower to the middle flower. That’s why the answer is A
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In number 13, when we talked about patterns, it should be a consistent or a fixed change. Since the pictures dont have a consistent pattern, in some cases that there are no patterns seen, we resort to counting the number of elements in the figure instead. So basically the amount of elements in the figure is 4, so in the choices, we cancel out all answer without the 4 elements and thats how I got my answer.
I was having a really bad day today, but watching you guys genuinely brightened my day, so thank you.
Hope you get better soon!🙏🏽
I’m Better Than MoreSidemen
Yo Bruvv, I’m a small content creator, and I make a variety of entertaining reactions, vlogs, and a range Of other content and I’m still working On quality but I guarantee you will find something you will enjoy🙏🏾💯
The timings of sidemen releases are just perfect. I literally just finished my project work 😌
I’m better than MoreSidemen
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22:26 Vik was right on the 13th question thats the logic behind it. Half of a leaf moves one step to the right out of the screen so at the end you get A. Firstly half of the 3rd one is out then the other half. Then half of the 2nd leaf goes to the right then the other half making the shape from A
they aren't moving off the screen though, it's the same 3 flowers. I don't know why Vik thinks they are moving off the screen, cause that actually doesn't make any sense. The pattern is that the far right flower loses its petals, then the middle flower loses one petal while the far right one grows one back. so given that the far right flower lost all its petals before growing any back, the only possible answer would be A where the middle flower loses all its petals and the far right one grows them all back.
@@logodrumline14 You can look at it like a section of a longer series. There are many ways to visualise it as long as it makes logical sense. You can visualise it as, each flower is borrowing half a petal per slide to another flower on the right which has no petals until it itself has no petals left and the series continues.
as someone already detailed in the comments these pattern recognition questions dont just have 1 awnser only because you dont have enough proof, but in case youre wondering the flower pattern (i also did what josh did) in the 3 flowers alligned: flower 3 LOSES half the other 2 remain » Flower 3 Loses other half, other 2 remain » flower 3 REGAINS 1 half back, flower 2 loses a half, flower 1 remains » (awnser wanted) Flower 3 regains 2nd half, flower 2 loses another half, flower 1 remains. It would continue to Flower 3 probably remains intact or loses another half, flower 2 regains 1 half, flower 1 loses a half.