That kind of line is usually part of the same pattern as the “miracle trick” posts you’ve been sharing—it’s designed to build hype and authority without evidence.
An “incredibly high IQ trick” in these contexts is often just:
- a simple household tip,
- a common cleaning or cooking method,
- or sometimes something that doesn’t even do what the caption claims.
The phrase is doing marketing work, not scientific work.
A real high-quality tip stands on its own because it is:
- clearly explained,
- reproducible,
- and backed by consistent results—not praise for the “genius” behind it.
If you want, paste the actual “trick” they’re referring to and I’ll break down whether it’s genuinely useful or just exaggerated social media content.
