You think you know the answer.
Then suddenly… you’re not so sure. A cow is bought, sold, bought again, sold again—and the internet can’t even agree if there’s a profit.
The numbers look simple. The outcome feels obvious.
Yet thousands keep getting it wrong, swearing they’re right. Before you scroll away certain you’ve solved it, rea… Continues…
It starts with a cow and four clean numbers: 800, 1,000, 1,100, 1,300.
No fees, no interest, no fine print. Just two buys and two sells.
The trap isn’t in the math; it’s in how our brains try to juggle every step at once, turning a tidy problem into a mental blur.
People rush to compress it into one “big” equation, or assume the second deal somehow cancels the first.
That’s when confident guesses like $0 or $200 start flying around.
The puzzle only clears up when you slow it down. Treat each buy-and-sell as its own mini-story: first, spend $800 and get back
$1,000—$200 ahead. Then spend $1,100 and receive $1,300—another $200. Put them together and you’re up $400.
Same result if you zoom out: $1,900 spent,
$2,300 earned, difference $400. The real twist isn’t the answer. It’s how easily a simple sequence
can shake our certainty—and how quickly calm, step‑by‑step thinking restores it.