Engaging Introduction
Remember that feeling in elementary school when the teacher put a shape on the board and said, "How many squares do you see?"
You raised your hand confidently. "Four!" you shouted. The teacher smiled. "Look closer." You looked. Six? Eight? Suddenly, your confident answer felt very, very wrong.
That simple puzzle has been humbling bright minds for generations. It appears on social media every few months, always sparking heated debates in the comments. It shows up in job interviews as a test of attention to detail. And somehow, no matter how many times you've seen it, counting squares never seems to get easier.
I fell for this puzzle just last week. A friend posted a grid of squares—just a simple 4x4 arrangement. How hard could it be? I counted 16. Then I stared longer. Then I saw the bigger squares. Then the even bigger ones. Then I gave up and scrolled to the comments, where 47 people had 47 different answers.
The puzzle of counting squares isn't really about squares at all. It's about how we see patterns. It's about our brains' tendency to jump to conclusions. And it's about the quiet satisfaction of finally getting the right answer after staring until your eyes cross.
Let me walk you through why this puzzle is so tricky, how to solve it methodically, and why it continues to challenge everyone from preschoolers to PhDs.
Why This Puzzle Is So Deceptively Difficult
At first glance, counting squares seems trivial. You look at a grid. You count the small ones. You're done. Right?
Wrong.
The puzzle is difficult because our brains are wired to see the most obvious pattern first—the small, individual squares. Those are easy to count. But once you start looking, you realize there are larger squares made of multiple smaller squares. Then even larger ones. Then ones that are tilted. Then ones that overlap in ways you didn't notice.
The real challenge: You're not just counting what's immediately visible. You're counting every possible square that can be formed within the grid—including those that aren't outlined for you.
It's like a hidden object game where the objects are hiding in plain sight.

