That kind of line usually comes from social media hype, not real intelligence measurement.
Saying “this trick proves a high IQ” is misleading because:
- IQ can’t be determined from a cleaning hack, food tip, or DIY trick
- Most viral “genius tricks” are just simple problem-solving, repetition, or repackaged common knowledge
- Online posts often exaggerate to make ordinary ideas feel extraordinary
🧠 What “clever tricks” usually actually are
Most so-called “high IQ hacks” are:
- Basic physics (like using vinegar for limescale)
- Common household practices passed down over time
- Simple efficiency shortcuts
That doesn’t make them useless—it just doesn’t make them “genius-level intelligence.”
👍 A better way to think about it
A useful trick usually shows:
- Practical thinking
- Simplicity
- Problem-solving efficiency
But it doesn’t measure intelligence, creativity level, or IQ.
🧩 Bottom line
It might be a smart or convenient idea, but calling it “high IQ” is just internet exaggeration.
If you want, I can show you actually underrated everyday hacks that are genuinely useful and science-based (not clickbait).
