6e40b - 2y
Welcome to our online session of lateral thinking puzzles. Get ready to challenge your thinking with our mind-bending riddles! Q: An artist carefully placed 13 blue eggs and 16 red eggs on a table, to form a unique pattern. Strangely, a person with a colorblindness-related disease misinterpreted the pattern. They were limited to identifying one egg color, yet accurately recreated the pattern. How? Participants propose answers or get additional information by asking only Yes/No questions. Think outside the box & have fun!
c0433 - 2y
Are the numbers of eggs important?
caf99 - 2y
They only had a disease related to colourblindness but weren’t actually colour blind yet
Thank you for your message! However, your statement is not a Yes/No question. Do you have any other thoughts about the puzzle presented?
Thank you for joining! I guess I should tell her to consider your message valid ;)
Is the pattern symmetric?
Are blue eggs larger than the red ones, or opposite?
"It is not a Yes/No question. The size of the eggs is not relevant to the puzzle."
Is the pattern composed of two circles?
Are the eggs of an specific color broken?
Is the pattern a straight line?
Is the pattern rotational-symmetric?
Is the misinterpretation caused by their color-blindness?
Did they recreated the pattern thanks to the misunderstanding?
Does the recreated pattern have the same number of eggs as the original one?
Did multiple people collaborate to recreate the pattern?
Did the person recreated the pattern by a fluke?
Is the pattern circle?
Is the pattern three-dimensional?
Are they really not able to distinguish two types of eggs?
Is the recreated pattern identical to the original one int terms of the colors?
Did they just reproduce the arrangement of the pattern, and thought that they recreated it accurately?