Recipe

I have to admit, the person who came up with this trick has an incredibly high IQ

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).

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