This is a particularly sssss sneaky snake.
Thought last month’s Visual Wildlife Safari was stunning? Puzzle lovers will almost snap their eyes trying to solve the latest animal optical illusion from Hungarian writer and artist Gérlé Dudas – also known as The Dudolph.
The challenge for the audience this time is to find a snake from the Turtle Sea.
Also, anyone who sees Naagin in less than 15 seconds is said to break the world record, according to people who track such a success rate.
[Warning: Spoilers below]
Herpetological Where’s Waldo, created by Hungarian cartoonist and illusionist Gergeli Dudas, shows a gathering of green and brown turtles in a meadow with no Slyther in sight.
Watch the snake in this optical illusion in 15 seconds to break the world record
The snake is particularly difficult to find in the grass, as the snake resembles the long, green necks of turtles.
Luckily for the confused puzzlers, Dudas provided a handy spoiler showing the shy snake raising its head from behind the turtle shell in the lower left corner. It’s the crater itself shellless Head and neck rise in a sea of serpents.
Still can’t figure it out? If you give up, scroll to the bottom of this page to view it.
This is not the time when the artist has created a puzzle that will tax the mind of the audience to the maximum.
In another of his Needles in a Haystack-like drawings, viewers are challenged to find the mouse among the mushrooms in less than a minute.
Meanwhile, another illusion invites puzzle lovers to find a coconut in a real brown bear mosh pit.
Full Disclosure: Such optical illusions are often intended as a light-hearted distraction from the stresses of modern life — but they also have legal value for medical professionals. These brain teasers are credited with helping researchers shed light on the complex inner workings of the human mind and how it responds to its surroundings.
dr Gustav Kuhn, a psychologist and specialist in human perception at Goldsmiths University in London, once told The Sun that illusions are crucial to our understanding of the brain: “We usually take perception for granted and rarely work that hard . Think about the tasks that arise in everyday life, such as seeing a cup of coffee in front of you.”
The snake has a head and neck that does not protrude from the front of the turtle’s shell. thedudolf.blogspot.com
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