// advanced challenge
50 questions. 60 minutes. Numerical, verbal, and abstract reasoning, shuffled together.
50 questions, drawn at random from numerical reasoning, verbal reasoning, and abstract reasoning, shuffled together into one test.
You have 60 minutes. Finish early and you'll see your score immediately. If the clock runs out first, every question you haven't answered yet counts against you.
This is a single, unified aptitude test that draws randomly from three separate reasoning domains, numerical, verbal, and abstract, and puts them all under one clock. It measures the same skills as the individual tests, but adds a real constraint most of them don't: sustained focus across different kinds of thinking without knowing what's coming next.
The 60-minute limit is deliberate. Real cognitive assessments rarely give you unlimited time or a single, predictable question type. Switching between numbers, words, and patterns under a countdown is a meaningfully different skill than being good at any one of them in isolation.
You can finish early and see your score right away. If the clock runs out first, whatever you haven't answered yet is scored as incorrect, exactly as it would be in a real timed assessment.