Skill & Knowledge
Real questions, real answers, find out what you actually know.
This is the smallest category and the most honest one. Skill quizzes are not about personality or vibe or what kind of cheese you would be. They ask you actual questions and grade you on whether you got them right. The Grammar Test runs through the rules most people half remember, from comma splices to subject verb agreement to the dangling modifier you have been writing for years without noticing. The Logic Puzzle set draws from classic reasoning problems, with a difficulty curve that climbs fast after question five. Geography Knowledge covers capitals, flags, and the kind of world map questions that reveal whether you have been paying attention to the news. Vocabulary Range gives you a calibrated estimate of how many words you know, based on the same methodology academic researchers use for lexical inventories. There is a Trivia All Rounder for general knowledge, and a Music Theory primer for anyone who has been told they have a good ear but cannot name the chords. Results show your score, where you ranked against other takers, and which questions tripped most people up. Take them once for the number, twice to see what you actually learned.
2 quizzes in this category.
How smart are you, really?
Twelve mixed reasoning questions across logic, numbers, words, patterns, and lateral thinking, with one honest read at the end.
12 Qs / ~7 min / 0 takes
How wide is your general knowledge?
Fifteen questions across science, geography, history, the arts, and language, for one quick read on how broad your knowledge runs.
15 Qs / ~7 min / 0 takes
Frequently asked about skill & knowledge quizzes
- Are the skill and knowledge quizzes actually graded?
- Yes. Skill quizzes are scored against right and wrong answers, unlike personality or fun quizzes. Your result reflects how many questions you answered correctly and, when available, how that score compares with other takers. The score is still limited by the quiz length and question mix. It can show what you know in that moment, but it is not a full certification.
- What does my score mean on a skill quiz?
- Your score is a snapshot of your performance on that specific set of questions. A high score usually means you handled the topic well. A lower score may show gaps, unfamiliar wording, or simple mistakes under time pressure. Look at the questions you missed before judging yourself too harshly. One quiz can point out what to study next, but it does not define your ability.
- Can I see the answer key after I finish?
- Where possible, skill quizzes should show the correct answers after completion or explain which areas caused trouble. Seeing the answer key is part of learning, especially for grammar, logic, geography, and trivia. Some quizzes may hold back details to prevent answer copying or preserve replay value. When explanations are shown, use them to understand the rule or fact, not just memorize the letter choice.
- Is a skill quiz here the same thing as an IQ test?
- No. Skill quizzes test a narrow topic, such as grammar, vocabulary, logic puzzles, geography, music theory, or general trivia. An IQ test is a formal assessment with specific design and administration standards. A strong score on a logic or vocabulary quiz may say something about that skill area, but it should not be treated as an IQ score or a measure of overall intelligence.
- Where do the skill quiz questions come from?
- Questions are written from common educational standards, public knowledge, established rules, and familiar puzzle formats. For topics like grammar or geography, we aim for questions that test real understanding rather than obscure tricks. For trivia, the balance is different because surprise is part of the fun. The goal is to make misses feel fair once you see the answer.

