Depending on how many squares you saw, here’s what might have happened:
Saw only 9
You noticed the obvious — common under quick scanning or distraction
Saw 10–13
You caught some larger patterns but missed a few combinations
Saw all 14
Strong visual processing, attention to detail, and patience with pattern tasks
Factors that influence your count:
Attention span
Experience with puzzles
Cognitive flexibility
Time spent analyzing
Stress or fatigue levels
None of these are linked to narcissism.
Debunking the Narcissism Myth
Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) is a clinical diagnosis defined by the DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders). Traits include:
Grandiosity
Need for excessive admiration
Lack of empathy
Exploitative behavior
Sense of entitlement
These cannot be measured by counting shapes.
Real assessments use structured interviews and validated tools like:
The Narcissistic Personality Inventory (NPI)
The Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI)
And even then, only trained professionals should interpret results.
Why Did This Viral Hoax Spread?
Because it plays on two powerful human tendencies:
Curiosity: We love learning about ourselves
Social sharing: People post their answers to prove they’re “not narcissists”
But turning a brain teaser into a personality test is misleading — even when meant as a joke.
Fun Ways This Puzzle Can Be Useful
While it won’t diagnose anything, it can help:
Brain warm-up
Great for students or before creative work
Mindfulness exercise
Focus on details without judgment
Team-building game
Compare observations and discuss perception differences
Teaching tool
For kids learning geometry or spatial reasoning
Try it with friends — and skip the fake psychology.
Final Thoughts
You don’t need to worry if you only saw 9 squares.
But you should smile at how much fun our brains have with a simple grid.
So next time you’re scrolling past a viral “personality test”…
pause.
Laugh.
Share.
But don’t believe everything that says it knows you better than you know yourself.
Because real self-awareness isn’t found in cookies or clickbait.
It grows — slowly, thoughtfully, and honestly.
And that kind of insight?
It takes more than counting squares.