I hate these kinds of tests. But honestly, I can’t ignore them because my naive mind thinks that you have to know if you’ll be a sharpshooter if you’re drafted. I am aware that I am not alone, but God knows why I am the way I am! Since a stone has found its way in—but where—a Reddit brainteaser that shows an industrial-sized coffee grinder with millions of beans inside has gone viral.
You have “sniper vision” if you find the tiny pebble in ten seconds or less because it is so well concealed that many people have had trouble locating it. The snapshot was sent to the “FindTheSniper” subreddit, where members share images of “camouflage hidden in plain sight.”
One individual commented, “Oh hell no,” in response to the post titled “Find the Pebble in This Coffee.” The reply from another was, “I agree. I won’t lose my mind trying to locate it. A third person posted on social media, saying, “Some people just want to watch the world burn.” However, it is visible, even in “plain sight,” but you would need to enlarge the image enough to see it, as I did only after learning the answer.In less than five seconds, I found it! “I never locate them, even the easy ones!” wrote one user. Someone else said, “Left side. Make sure to slightly lower the beans as you observe their placement on the pole. There is something white, like a tooth. Someone else said, “I found it on the left side. I am hyper-focused like God. If you liked that one, get ready to learn about more sly snipers. Actually, a photographer recently took a picture of a deadly sniper who was hidden from his target and was nearly invisible to the untrained eye.
In his “Camouflage” series, photographer Simon Menner documented a range of scenarios that had one thing in common: a sniper in disguise was present in every picture. Are you able to recognize the sniper in every picture? “Even though they are unseen owing to their expertise, there are concealed snipers in each of these photographs,” says Menner’s website description for his series. They point their snipers at both the viewer and the camera.
The German, Lithuanian, and Latvian troops gave Menner “full access to their snipers,” which allowed him to get the photos.
Have fun while hunting!