The ones that really stumped me were the circle ones (one solid, one with a < in it, the other 6 empty) and the other circle one with the little squares either filled in or solid, inside or outside the circle, and of course the last one.
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Palindromes might be a test of intelligence, but who knows...any teachers debunk these hieroglyphic type iq tests yet?
The ones that really stumped me were the circle ones (one solid, one with a < in it, the other 6 empty) and the other circle one with the little squares either filled in or solid, inside or outside the circle, and of course the last one.
My coworker went through and found all the possible combinations. There's no way to get 20 points. Some answers are worth 2 points and some questions have more than 1 correct answer

sounds like another guy who scored higher than you![]()
My coworker went through and found all the possible combinations. There's no way to get 20 points. Some answers are worth 2 points and some questions have more than 1 correct answer
I clicked the 4th square on every one and got a 93.
Answer is A.
It can't be a blank circle because that messes up the pattern. It could be C or D, but that wouldn't exactly hold a pattern either. A is the best answer because it allows for a unique circle in each row and column. IOW, no repeats.
I can't see how that answer - or any answer - is very compelling. With only two non-blank images, who's to say what "pattern" is there or that "no repeats" should be the theme? If the point of those two images is simply to be different, that seems a bit weird because then the chosen image contents are otherwise completely meaningless.