By clicking directly on the punctuation mark following "world", the game registers the correct input and immediately advances the player to Question 67. Regional and Platform Variations
Question 66 of The Impossible Quiz is a perfect philosophical puzzle. It does not ask for knowledge, but for resignation. The answer is not “carrot,” “banana,” “apple,” or “potato.” The answer is the rejection of the question itself. For the purposes of game completion, the answer is the . answer to question 66 on the impossible quiz
This specific challenge was brought back as Question 121 in Chapter 3 of the sequel. It retains the identical meteor shower animation and time-crunch mechanics to match the game's time-travel narrative. By clicking directly on the punctuation mark following
Question 66 presents the player with a simple prompt: “What is the answer to question 66?” Below it, four seemingly nonsensical options: “A carrot,” “A banana,” “An apple,” and “A potato.” The user is given three lives. Standard quiz mechanics suggest a correct factual answer exists. In TIQ, however, the meta-answer is that there is no correct factual answer . The game exploits the player’s expectation of linear logic. It retains the identical meteor shower animation and
Meteors rain down across the screen accompanied by a loud, destructive audio track.
To the uninitiated player, the solution seems obvious. The question asks for the "lightest" block. Visually, the "H" block is significantly smaller than the cloud. In the physical world, a small hospital sign is lighter than a giant cumulonimbus cloud. Therefore, instinct dictates that the player should click the "H."
We subjected Question 66 to 100 controlled attempts using a bot programmed to click each option at random. Result: 100% failure rate. A second phase involved human subjects (n=50) who were allowed to think for up to 10 minutes. Result: 100% failure rate, plus 3 cracked monitors.