Stop Wasting Your Time Fighting
the Tech Stack
(and use it to your advantage instead)
Join hundreds of business owners who are building simple, powerful systems through automation.
It also highlights a beautiful tension: the difference between scientific existence and colloquial existence. To a physicist, a lone magnetic south pole is a monopole — a theoretical object that has never been observed. To a schoolchild, the South Pole is where Santa doesn’t live, but penguins do. The quiz aligns with the physicist.
The trick is that “south pole” also refers to the . In magnetism, poles come in pairs: north and south. Every magnet has both. A single magnetic south pole cannot exist without a north pole. Therefore, in the game’s twisted logic, “the South Pole” — as an independent entity — does not exist. which place does not exist impossible quiz
Of course, the Earth’s South Pole does exist. But the quiz doesn’t care about Earth. It cares about the word . Unlike many Impossible Quiz questions that rely on brute force trial-and-error or absurdist humor (like “Can you dig it?” with a shovel that falls off the screen), Question 38 feels fair . It feels like a riddle. That’s what makes its cruelty so memorable. It also highlights a beautiful tension: the difference
In the sprawling, chaotic, and brilliantly frustrating universe of The Impossible Quiz , there is one question that haunts players long after the game over screen fades. It’s not the fast-paced clicking of Question 17 (the infamous “?” maze) or the random bomb-defusing of Question 22. It’s quieter. Slyer. It’s Question 38: The quiz aligns with the physicist
This is the genius of The Impossible Quiz . Created by Splapp-me-do (Lewis Cross) in 2007 as a Flash-based exercise in cognitive dissonance, the quiz doesn’t test knowledge. It tests expectation . It weaponizes your brain’s natural instinct to process language literally.
(and use it to your advantage instead)
Join hundreds of business owners who are building simple, powerful systems through automation.