I am an odd number
1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15
I start with a vowel
1, 8, 11
I am the solution of x - 2 = 9
11
Rotate me 180° to make a different number
6, 9
I am the atomic number of Hydrogen
1
I am a multiple of 6
6, 12
I am the remaining number
4
I am the number of sides in an tetradecagon
14
My square also appears in this quiz
1, 2, 3
I am a divisor of 14
1, 2, 7, 14
I am a 3 letter word
1, 2, 6, 10
I have a W in my written form
2, 12
I am a single letter in Roman Numerals
1, 5, 10 (I, V, X)
I am a prime number
2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
Correct!
Incorrect
You left this blank
I thought the timer was comfortable enough to get through all those numbers without rushing. I'll take a look at the stats and future comments to see if adding more time would make sense.
The answer, IIRC, was 9... but if you flip (in the sense of mirroring) 9 upside down, you don't get a number at all, but rather something like: მ
I assume you're getting at the fact that if you rotate it around to become upside down you get a 6. But that's just that: it's rotating it (around 180°), not flipping it.
When I read the question, I thought the answer was 5, as that's a digit that, when you actually flip it upside down, you do (sort of) get a different digit back out, specifically a 2. (Yeah it's a bit of a stretch... it works well with e.g. seven-segment displays, like you'd find on a calculator, but less so with Latin-style fonts. But that's the only one that I could think of that made sense.)
Any chance you could tweak the wording on that one to refer to rotating it around rather than flipping it? Thanks!
One of the issues I have, maybe it's just me, but I found the timer waaaay too short. It took me slightly above ten minutes, so over 2.5x longer than the quizzes intended completion time.
It gave me PTSD of spending hours doing that logic puzzle here where every answer was based on another question thinking i was a genius but i got like 5 of 20 correct.
Sorry but the instructions are unclear and I had to restart the quiz three times to actually understand what I had to do.
Can somebody tell me how is this featured?
Otherwise, it just seems like a pointless little tantrum you could have thrown on your own but decided to post on the Internet for some reason. I'm sure that's not what you intended; but it's hard to suss out what you did intend, otherwise.
Here's another way to explain what to do:
Go through the 15 affirmations using the arrows. If a statement refers to multiple numbers, skip it and read the next one. Proceed this way until you find a statement that matches only one number -example of question: "I'm the higher number here". Select the number (right answer) and jump to other statements.
As you go though the statements, the possibilities will diminish as you eliminate numbers, until they end up with just one. Which is the remaining number.
The process is the same in my other Elimination Quizzes.
I hope this explanation will help you and that you'll understand why this is featured.
"If more than one answer can correspond, jump to the next question and use a process of elimination."
I had to cycle through several times, picking off the 1-2 questions I could uniquely answer each time, until all were eliminated.
Yes, on its own, there are multiple answers for some questions, but for all the questions to be correct, you must choose the answer that allows you to answer another question correctly. Which is why the instructions tell you exactly how to solve it (by continuing through until you find a question that has only one answer, and then reviewing the questions you previously found to be ambiguous).
Me- clicks five
Game- Wrong
Me- checks answers, and sees 5