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Want to evaluate your mental abilities in a fun way? Our entertaining stupidity test will challenge you with unexpected questions so you can see yourself from a new angle and perhaps be surprised by the results. This is not a scientific assessment, just a reason to have a good laugh while answering tricky questions.

How developed your logical thinking skills are in everyday life
Whether you tend to fall for common cognitive traps and misconceptions
How you assess your own mental abilities: objectively or with bias
Your decision-making style: impulsive, analytical, or intuitive
Your level of attention to detail and critical perception of information
The test is inspired by classic research on cognitive biases (Kahneman & Tversky, 1974), Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences (1983), and Flavell's work on metacognition (1979). Questions touch on logical thinking, attentiveness, critical perception, and emotional regulation.
Kahneman and Tversky publish their work on cognitive biases and heuristics
Flavell introduces the concept of metacognition: the ability to think about thinking
Gardner proposes the theory of multiple intelligences
Dunning and Kruger describe the effect of overestimating one's own abilities
You will see 20 statements. Rate how well each one describes you on a scale from 'Not me at all' to 'That's exactly me'. Answer quickly and honestly: there are no right or wrong answers, and your result depends on your sincerity. 💡 This is an entertainment test: it's created for fun and self-reflection, not for making any conclusions.
The concept of 'stupidity' is not a diagnostic term in scientific psychology. However, research on cognitive abilities shows that people systematically overestimate or underestimate their mental skills: this phenomenon is described as the Dunning-Kruger effect (1999). Our test playfully addresses several aspects of cognitive functioning: the ability to reason logically, critical thinking, attention to detail, and metacognition: the ability to evaluate one's own cognitive processes. The questions are built on principles of cognitive psychology and behavioral economics, which show that even smart people make systematic thinking errors. The test does not measure IQ and makes no claims of academic accuracy: its goal is to show how you think about your thinking and to entertain you in the process.
The test playfully evaluates your tendency toward cognitive traps, impulsive decisions, and self-irony. It doesn't measure IQ: rather, it shows how you approach unusual situations and relate to your own thinking.
No. This is an entertainment tool, not a psychometric method. To measure intelligence, there are standardized tests like WAIS or Raven's Progressive Matrices.
The test has 20 questions and takes about 5 minutes. Answer quickly: your first reaction is often the most revealing.
Your mood, fatigue level, and even time of day affect how you respond. This is normal for entertainment tests.
The test is designed for ages 14 and up. Questions require basic life experience and understanding of abstract situations.
Quick, fun, and free! Find out your result right now.