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IQ tests used to be a joke – until Reddit users took MyIQ and started spiraling

Andrew Richardson by Andrew Richardson
April 23, 2025
in Human Resource Consulting
0

PedroVazPaulo > Consulting > Human Resource Consulting > IQ tests used to be a joke – until Reddit users took MyIQ and started spiraling

There was a time when online IQ tests were just internet filler. Something you clicked on out of boredom, got a suspiciously high number, maybe shared it in a group chat as a joke, and moved on. But scroll through Reddit today and you’ll find something different – posts that start with “just took the MyIQ.com test…” and end somewhere between existential panic and identity crisis.

What used to be just a number has turned into something heavier. Especially when the site you’re using – MyIQ.com – isn’t playing around. No glittering score animations or dumb trick questions. Just a structured cognitive test, and a score that hits harder than expected.

The average score that hit too close to home

In “Just received myiq score and had a reality check,” the story is disarmingly quiet. A 31-year-old user takes the MyIQ test for fun and scores a 110. Right in the statistical middle. “As it happens, I’m average,” they write, then immediately start comparing that number to the rest of their life. Salary. Career. The general tempo of their days. “It all seems to make sense.”

There’s no meltdown here, no dramatic rejection of the results. Just something quieter, and arguably more unsettling: agreement. The test didn’t offend them – it confirmed something they weren’t ready to say out loud. That they weren’t exceptional. That maybe all those “you’re special” messages growing up didn’t pan out. And MyIQ, with its clean UX and clinical tone, delivered that truth without blinking.

It’s the kind of moment that most online quizzes wouldn’t dare go near. But it’s what keeps popping up in MyIQ reviews: the sense that this thing might be onto something real.

The gifted score that didn’t feel like a win

On the other end of the emotional spectrum is the post titled “just took the MyIQ test and the results threw me off a bit.” This user’s score? 137. That’s high. Like, “qualifies for Mensa” high. And yet, instead of feeling validated, they end up spiraling.

They write about doing well in school, picking things up quickly, but never really caring much about formal IQ numbers. Then, late one night, they take the test. The score drops. And suddenly, they’re in a philosophical rabbit hole. “Some people say it’s just pattern recognition,” they write. “Others say it correlates with success. But I know plenty of smart people who struggle in life.”

It’s not false modesty – it’s dissonance. Because deep down, they’re asking the same question the first user was: What is this number supposed to mean about me?

That’s the thing with MyIQ. It doesn’t just test your brain – it tests your narrative. And when that narrative breaks, the result isn’t celebration or devastation. It’s confusion. This is intelligence without ego, and it’s weirdly hard to sit with.

The unexpected high that raised even more questions

Then there’s the middle case – the post titled “is myiq score a real measure of intelligence or just a fun test?” The user scored a 126. Higher than they’d expected. But instead of closing the tab and walking away satisfied, they start asking bigger questions.

They had assumed IQ was static – you’re either born with it or you’re not. But now they’re wondering if intelligence can evolve. Can it improve with practice? Does learning chess or solving puzzles actually change anything? Is this number a snapshot, or a trajectory?

This is what makes the MyIQ test so different from its predecessors. Because it doesn’t sell you a fantasy. It hands you a number and lets you sit with it. Then, quietly, it lets you decide what to do next.

And people are doing exactly that – thinking. Questioning. Posting reviews not just about the test itself, but about the way it made them re-examine the entire framework they’d been using to define themselves.

More than a number, less than a diagnosis

All three Reddit posts are wildly different in tone and score, but they share one thing: none of these users are debating the validity of the test itself. They’re not trashing the experience. In fact, quite the opposite – there’s a strange respect running through all of them.

Because MyIQ doesn’t try to dazzle. It doesn’t talk down to users, and it doesn’t inflate results to make you feel good. That’s what keeps coming up in user reviews, too. One reviewer called it “the first online test that didn’t feel like a gimmick.” Another wrote, “It’s not a replacement for clinical testing, but it gave me real insight into how I think.”

That’s a recurring theme: people aren’t just reacting to their score – they’re reacting to how seriously they’re suddenly taking it.

We thought intelligence was simple. Then we saw the results.

There’s a moment, in every one of these posts, when you can almost see the realization click: this wasn’t about finding out how “smart” they are. It was about recalibrating how they think about themselves.

A 110 can feel like a mirror. A 137 can feel like a mystery. A 126 can feel like a question mark. And all of them, in the right moment, can lead to the same place: reflection.

That’s what MyIQ is doing, whether it intended to or not. It’s taking something as cold and mathematical as an IQ score and turning it into a trigger for internal dialogue. A strange, uncomfortable, often unspoken one: Who am I really, and why did I expect that number to say something different?

Online tests don’t usually carry this kind of weight. But MyIQ, whether by design or accident, does. And Reddit is where all that weight is spilling out, one post at a time.

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