Goal: The group must complete a puzzle. Split team members into equal groups of 4 or 5 people though not ideal, it is possible to play with groups of 3.
Give each group a different jigsaw puzzle. It is their tasks to solve the puzzle, however, there is a catch.
Each puzzle has had pieces of the other puzzles mixed in at random. Explain to all the groups that other teams may have the pieces they need.
Members have to strategize, assign roles and barter with other teams to get pieces they need to complete their puzzle first.
This activity offers a dual challenge: firstly they need to solve the puzzle in a short period of time, secondly they need to convince the other team to trade them the necessary pieces. This is a particularly good activity if you want to strengthen your sales team or get team members to practice negotiating and strategizing skills.
Did you assign people on your team specific roles? Was there a leader? A negotiator? Did you plan at the beginning? Did the plan change as time passed? Items Needed: Rope, shoe string, or pole. Goal: The entire team must cross over the top of the "electric fence.
In this activity, you will create an "electric fence" that teams must cross over without touching. To create the fence, tie a rope or shoe string to two chairs or other objects. The rope should be elevated to about waist-height.
Position the team on one side of the rope. To get from one side to the other, members must go over, not under, one at a time. They also must be touching another member of the group with at least one hand at all times. Participants should not make any contact with the electric fence at anytime.
If they violate a rule, they must start the exercise all over again. Because of the physical nature of this game often team members will need to lift each other over the rope it is not well suited for people with back, knee, or ankle injuries. This activity motivates people to brainstorm ideas, problem solve and put their proposed plans into action. It also requires a high degree of trust and communication due to its physical demands.
What was one positive thing you learned about your teammates in the course of this exercise? Time: 25 minutes. Items Needed: Paper, writing utensils, A selection of everyday items bottle cap, coin, key etc. Goal: The artist must draw an item based only on the team's description of it.
Similar to Charades, but with a twist. Blind Drawing is a team-building activity that can be done in groups of Each team must appoint one artist. Give the artist drawing materials and sit them with their back facing the rest of the team so they're not able to see the group.
The group then picks an item or picture from those supplied. They must successfully get the artist to draw this item or picture in 3 minutes. However they aren't allowed to tell the artist what the item is; they can only give indirect descriptions. Say the team chose a photo of a bee. They can't say 'draw a bee' however they can give hints like 'buzz', 'yellow and black,' 'honey maker,' etc.
The artist can not ask any questions and must draw only based on the descriptions. When times up, groups should compare their drawings. It can be comical to see how badly they can turn out. The game can get people laughing and highlights how difficult giving instructions can be and how important it is to communicate clearly. Time: 30 Minutes. Number of Participants: Items Needed: Smart phone, Reverse charades application or board game Goal: Teams use 60 second rounds to act out as many words as possible while only one person guesses.
In a normal game of charades, one person from a group stands up and acts out a word or phrase while the rest of the team tries to guess. However, in reverse charades, the scenario is flipped. The rest of the team must work together to act out a word or phrase while one person has to guess.
You can play the box game version or download the mobile app. In Reverse Charades, it is necessary for team members to communicate with each other. Because there is one person is guessing and everyone else is acting, everyone is involved throughout the entire game, making it a good pick for shyer or attention avoidant team members.
No one can sit back while a few take on the challenge. Items Needed: Building materials clay, toothpick, plasticine, legos Goal: Recreate an object out of building materials only going off a verbal description. In this game, divide the group into multiple teams. One person from each team is selected to view a hidden object or sculpture.
They only have 10 seconds at a time to peek at the sculpture and must relay the information that they see to the rest of their group. The group must try to recreate the sculpture based on the peek person's description. Players must trust the team member to describe it accurately and listen to their instructions. It can help break down management barriers if you select a lower-level person as the person to view the sculpture. In a different position than they are accustomed to, it pushes them to adjust, direct a team and communicate clearly.
Time: Minutes. Items Needed: None. Goal: Create an interesting story one sentence at a time. To do a Conducted Story, groups stand in a circle. One person may act as the conductor, who is responsible for moving the story along.
The first person starts the story with a sentence like, "Mike went to the supermarket because The conducted story is a listening exercise that requires every team member to pay attention to what the others have said. It also stresses the importance of telling a seamless story and that unity and strong communication are needed to do that. Goal: To tell an entertaining story while incorporating team suggestions. This is another activity that combines storytelling and teamwork but with a twist.
People work in pairs or small teams of no more than four. One person is the storyteller while the others are the word givers. The word givers start off by giving a title that the storyteller must start talking about. Then, as they are speaking, givers yell random words that storytellers must incorporate. The key is that the words should be unrelated to the topic to make it more challenging and interesting.
For instance, in a story about, "Visiting the City," word givers should avoid relevant words like, "taxi", "skyscrapers", and "subway". Instead, they shout out unrelated words like, "coconuts", "T-Rex", "Big Foot", or "lumberjacks".
You can see a combination of Swedish Story and Conducted Story here:. Storytellers will be put on the spot and have to think fast. It drives them to actively listen to the words the other members say and insert them into the storyline. Did coming up with a story come naturally or did you find it to be a struggle?
Goal: Complete a goal while team's hands are tied together. In this activity, divide groups up into teams of 2 to 4. Form members into circles facing each other and use rope or shoe strings to tie their wrists to their neighbours wrist.
Then, give them a task that they must complete together with their hands tied. Because everyone's hands are tied, it will require the effort of each person to complete the task. The constraints can increase their creativity and push them to think outside-of-the-box.
This will also require good and constant communication. Number of Participants: 2. Items Needed: 1 smart phone for 2 people. Goal: Complete a dance with another person. Bounden is a mobile dance game designed to be played with partners with choreography by the Dutch National Ballet. A pairs holds a smartphone or tablet while instructions appear on the screen. Holding opposite ends of the device, you tilt the phone around a virtual sphere following a path of rings, resulting in players swinging their arms and twisting their bodies.
Sensors in the phone detect if the right moves are made. This can be used as a great icebreaker for small groups. It also requires people to pay close attention and follow the instructions.
As they continue, the moves can get more fast-paced or difficult, so they'll have to stay in sync and keep communicating to win. Was there anything you picked up on from your partner's non-verbal communication?
Items Needed: Various random objects, one per each participant. Goal: Come up with alternative uses for everyday objects and have team members guess said uses.
Each participant is given an object and must demonstrate an alternative use for it. You can use anything from a basketball or plastic bag to a hula hoop or stapler. Give the participant one-minute to silently act out their alternative use for the object; for example, a stapler could be used as a fork or a trumpet.
While they're acting, others in the group try to guess what they're mimeing. Every person who correctly guesses the alternative use gets a point. Once the minute is over, the next person will do the same and so on. The Game of Possibilities is a great way to bring out your team's creativity and quick thinking as well as a fun way to boost team creativity and innovation. Time: 30 minutes. Goal: Closely mimic movements of dancers to get points. Although one of the most effective and quickest ways to bring someone out of their comfort zone is to get them to dance, dancing can be uncomfortable for people who shy away from attention.
Dance Party solves this issue by having up to 4 participants dance at once. You can download the Dance Party app from the App Store and set it up in your office. Players mimic the dance moves that the avatar performs on the screen. Encourage members to form teams and compete. Dancing as a group takes the pressure and embarrassment out of dancing. Dance Party fosters healthy competition and energizes teams.
Plus, the physical activity can help reduce feelings of stress and anxiety. Items Needed: Smartphone. Goal: Guess the word displayed on participants phone. You may have seen "Heads Up! It is a mobile app available for download on Android and iOS devices, in which one player puts the phone on their forehead, the rest of the players can see the word, celebrity, or other category on the card, but it is hidden from the person holding it.
He or she has to guess the item on the card based on clues from their team. Although it is a fun app usually associated with parties, it can be perfect for office team-building.
The best part about the game is that you can use the preloaded decks or you can create your own decks. Make a deck that relates to your company or industry and test their knowledge while having some fun. Items Needed: Blindfold, masking tape, random assortment of items for the mine field. Goal: Team members must guide a blindfolded person through a minefield with only their words.
Minefield can be set up inside or outside, but make sure to clear the area to avoid any accidents. Place "mines" or objects in an obstacle area and mark a finish line with masking tape. Mines can be anything from styrofoam cups to cones, as long as they are soft with no rough edges. The member that is going through the field, or obstacle area must be blindfolded. The other members of the team direct them through the minefield by giving them verbal instructions. If they hit an object, they must start over.
The first team with all members across the minefield wins. It can be difficult for some to trust their team members or to rely on someone else to help them reach a goal.
Some may think they have to do it on their own. Minefield is an activity designed to foster trust in teams. It can help members that are resistant to collaboration become more open. What was the most difficult part about giving instructions? What about receiving instructions? What style of communication was the most effective? What didn't work? Items Needed: Tarp, Balls. Goal: Guide a ball around tarp without letting it fall into a hole.
Thought it may remind you of an activity you did in gym class, Hole Tarp can be a lot of fun, even for adults. It can be done with a tarp or plastic sheet and a few tennis balls. First you must cut one or a few holes into the tarp. Once this is done, place your team evenly around the tarp. Have each member hold the edge with both their hands. Instruct your team to shake the tarp so it begins moves around like a wave.
Once it is moving, throw in a ball. Participants must navigate the ball around the tarp for the longest possible period without having the ball fall through one of the holes. If the ball falls through a hole or off the side of the tarp, your team must restart the game. Alternatively, you can have the team guide the ball, circling each hole. The team wins the game when they successfully navigated the ball around the circumference of each tarp without having it fall into any of the holes.
Everyone on your team has to keep moving to keep the ball rolling. If someone stops, the ball will drop. This game relies on constant communication to achieve its final goal. Was there any forms of communication that worked better than others? Did you assign a leader formally or informally?
Did that help or hinder your progress? Time: 25 Minutes. Items Needed: Items that can be used as platforms milk crates, fabric square, tires, baseball base , 2 ropes or 4 cones. Goal: Cross the floor or ground by maneuvering across different objects. If the phrase "the floor is lava! Lava Flow, also called River Crossing, is a game in which a group must cross the river of lava by jumping and maneuvering across different objects. It's the team's task to figure out how to get the entire group from one side of the lava field to the other without touching the ground.
The group should be given a limited number of objects, 2 or 3, that way they have to be moved and shared each time someone crosses. If someone touches the floor at any point, then they will get burnt and must start over.
The first team to cross the river with all members intact are the winners. Time: Hours. Items Needed: Scavenger hunt list, smartphones optional. Goal: Gather as many items on the list within a set period of time. Scavenger hunts are one of the oldest ways to get people to interact and collaborate.
But, there are still one of the most effective and fun. Smartphones and apps have made it possible to do scavenger hunts anywhere. You can even add in photo or video challenges and share an album within the organization. You can do a simple scavenger hunt and keep it in the office or take it outdoors, which can be much more exciting. Create a list of items that groups must collect or tasks that they have to complete.
They can be goofy, as long as it's possible to complete. Think of a words that sound exactly the same and have opposite meanings. They are spelt differently but phonetically - they sound - the same. We know of four such words pairs, each which has two different spellings, same sound, and opposite meanings. Now think of a words pairings which are spelt the same and have two opposite meanings. There are several examples of such word pairs, plus another two pairs or hyphenated double-word constructions, again with same spellings and opposite meanings.
A word having two opposite meanings and same spelling is called a contranym or antagonym. And extending the theme, what words in the English language occur in two forms, exactly the same spelling, with opposite meanings? We know eight of these words. What trades or occupations are associated with these surnames? The sequence 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 incorporates another sequence: 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2. What order is denoted by the following prefixes? In Frederick Walton named his new product after the latin words for its two main constituents, flax and oil.
What was it? Shepherd and Turpin invented something that derived its name from theirs, and the name of the factory where it was first produced in BUNCH was an acronym at one time representing the big names in the computer industry competing with the dominant market leader IBM, can you name them?
Reinhard Goerdeler, Piet Klyjnveld, James Marwick, and William Barclay Peat founded businesses which merged to become what famous four-letter acronymic global corporation? What's noteworthy about the words 'reverberated' and 'stewardesses' in relation to typing?
And in the same vein, Lollipop? What do these pairings have in common and what is the odd pair in the sequence? What is it? What do these items have in common? What is assessed by the international grading system known as the Four C's, and what does each of the C's represent?
To ensure a fair division between two people for dividing chocolate bars between children for instance you might use the 'one cuts, the other chooses' method. How do you ensure a fair division between three people? Thanks David Grech. There are lots of countries and continents that begin with the letter 'A'.
Two of them differ from the rest; which two and why? Thanks Rupert Stubbs. What do these pairs have in common? What oversized onomatopoeically named mechanism was put on display for people to use at the British Wembley Exhibition is , in order to reassure the public as to its safety and reliability? A man is walking home with his dog at a steady 4mph. With 6 miles to go the dog is let off the leash and runs all the way home at 6 mph. The dog immediately turns and runs back to the man at the same speed, and upon meeting him it turns and runs home again.
It continues to run back and forth at the same speed until the man reaches home. What distance has the dog run since being let off the leash? Each of these famous people is related not by marriage to one other person in the list. How many relationships can you identify? What year when written in Roman numerals uniquely contains one of each symbol in descending order?
Irrespective of sheet size, what is the most number of times a square piece of normal stock paper can be folded in half? And not by repeatedly folding and unfolding it which would be cheating And as a supplementary question, what's the most number of folds in half achieved for a piece of normal stock paper irrespective of length and shape? What did each of these brand names originally represent? With no pre-selection, and excluding February 29th, what's the smallest number of people in a group required to ensure a better than even chance of at least two of them having the same birthday?
Do bullets fired straight up into the air take longer to go up or to come down, or the same time, and why? What famous confrontational sporting ritual traditionally began until changed in with the words, "Ka Mate Ka Mate.. How many of the novels can you name in which these characters appear?
What do these names have in common? A gameshow contestant reaches the final challenge: Two security guards are each holding identical closed brief cases. The guards know what is in each case. The contestant is told that one guard will lie and the other will tell the truth - but not which guard is which. He is then told that he can ask one guard just one question, and then he must choose one case or the other.
What question should he ask? There are two possible questions we know of thanks to John Fisher for suggesting the second one. A man took the bus every weekend to go fishing either to the lake or the river. Initially he tried to guess which would offer the best conditions, but frequently guessed wrong.
So he decided that as the buses to each place ran every ten minutes, and from the same bus-stop, he'd simply leave it to fate, and jump on the first bus that came along. After several weeks he was puzzled that he hardly ever got to go to the lake - in fact it was only about one week in ten - despite the fact that he got to the bus-stop at all different times, and that all the buses to both places ran on time this is only a story So why was this? How many times would a football rotate if rolled around the middle circumference of another football of the same size?
Please note that the answer to this question was corrected 17 Oct It is said to be bad grammar to finish a sentence with a preposition ie. Can you think of a sentence which makes sense and finishes with seven consecutive prepositions? The Bean. A new street is built with one hundred new houses, numbered 1 to How many number 9s are required to number all the houses? Neal Stothard.
Can you be mathematically certain that at least two people in the UK have exactly the same number of hairs on their head, and why so, or not? There are several fascinating similarities between the assassinations of American Presidents Abraham Lincoln and John F Kennedy - which ones can you name?
What politician, noted for his wit, when told that his trouser fly was open said, "Dead birds don't fall out of their nests There are four that we know ten-letter English words that can be made from the top row of letters on a normal QWERTY keyboard, what are they?
Why are buttons on women's and men's clothing such as jackets and shirts on different sides and for the same reason, why do bras fasten at the back? Two chess masters played fifteen consecutive games of chess.
No games were drawn, every game was finished, yet both players won and lost the same number of games as each other. How could this happen? There are five 'f's in the next sentance, and they're two mistakes in this one.
What is the price of each? Explain how this spells 'fish'. This question is based on UK currency as at May no doubt there will be changes in the future. Five Ands: construct a sentence which makes sense and state the scenario which includes the word 'and' five consecutive times. Eleven Hads: punctuate this sentence so that it makes sense: John where David had had had had had had had had had had had the better effect. Which one of these letters is the odd one out and why? AEIOU word puzzle: There are several words in the English language which have one of each of the vowels aeiou in the right alphabetical order.
How many do you know? Try the expressions derivations quiz. See also the Quizballs quizzes with free questions and answers - quicker questions for trivia and pub quizzes, and learning and amusement of course. A sign at the Hoover Dam complex contains a word combination three words joined together which includes five consecutive double letters - what is the word? Each triangle must be the same size, and every side of each triangle must be the same length as the sticks provided.
This puzzle thanks L Henderson is the sort which appears in emails from time to time. Most people would regard this as a trick question, or a lateral thinking question, so expect groans from your victims if you present it as a straightforward mathematical puzzle. There are some very clever 'trick' or lateral-thinking answers which will make you say "Doh!.. This tendency demonstrates how we read: not by looking at each word separately, but by seeing and recognizing several words at a time, especially if the phrase is an understandable concept.
This unconscious quick processing by the brain is normally helpful because it saves time, but on occasions it can fool us. The puzzle shows how vulnerable we are to false assumptions, and particularly that sometimes we lazily rely on our brain's ability to process information extremely quickly, when really we should be over-riding this unconscious processing by consciously focusing on the detail. The exercise will work with phrases other than Paris in the Spring, provided you keep to the same pattern.
This puzzle has been fooling people for decades. You can use it to demonstrate how our mind sometimes plays tricks on what we believe. The puzzle can also be used to support themes of concentration, accuracy, assumptions, and creative or lateral thinking which can be employed to devise an alternative method of arriving at the right answer; for example using the 'find' feature in your computer program.
The layout is probably important in the way that it works. Show the box below to people and ask them to read the words and count the number of times the letter f or F appears.
Most people get it wrong. Try it yourself, and then check your answer carefully. It's not a trick question - the trick is the way that the mind works in identifying letters. It is easy to miss the finer points in life. Folk are frequently guilty of falling into this trap.
The letter f appears eight times in the box. People commonly count seven, by failing to see the last but one f. Finished files are the result of years of scientific study combined with the experience of years.
Thanks to my Dad, who kept the first one on a card which he was given on a training course in the s. The second is perhaps more widely known, and featured in Frank Johnson's Notebook column in the Daily Telegraph, 8 March If you know who devised either of these clever little posers please tell me. Answer - yes, some people simply cannot see them all no matter how hard they look.
The puzzle is simply, what surprising result does the calculation ,, x ,, produce? This puzzle is made all the more intriguing by the difficulty in finding a readily available tool that can handle the calculation. Even MSExcel is unable to calculate or show such big numbers.
And R Lennox kindly informs me that, " Thanks D Harpell for the puzzle. This can be done with a pencil and paper by people who can do long-division engineers, people over forty years of age, etc ; otherwise it's advisable to suggest that people use a calculator to be sure of completing the exercise reliably and within three hours ordinarily it just takes a minute or two.
The puzzle can be given to any number of delegates at the same time to do individually, so it's ideal for diversions and mental warm-ups in training and meetings. Write down any three-digit number genuinely three digits, ie, not beginning with 0 , then write it down again, so as to give a 6-digit number, for example Divide the six-digit number by 7.
It adds to the effect if the facilitator says: "Don't worry about the remainder; there won't be one. Next, divide the answer by Again the facilitator can say: "Don't worry about the remainder; there won't be one. Here's why it works: the six-digit number is 1,times greater than the three-digit number, which seems logical when you realise that 1,times the three-digit number would add three zeros, and another 'one-times' replaces the three zeros with same first three digits.
Thanks Terry Moran. This is an amazing trick, ideal for parties, social gatherings, light relief or ice-breakers at meetings, and bar-bets.
It is two puzzles in one, that will amaze and astound, and will win you money and drinks, favours, fame and admiration, if you aspire to such things.
And this free easy puzzle is fantastic for kids parties too. In fact this is probably the best free trick in the history of the world. Cut a strip of paper so that its length is at least ten times that of its width - something around ten inches by one inch wide is fine.
Puzzle 1: The strip clearly has two sides, yes? If you were asked to write number 1's all along one side of the strip, and number 2's all along the other side of the strip this would be possible, yes? So could I prevent you from doing this simply by joining the ends of the strip to create a ring or band shape?
Puzzle 2: the strip, or now a band is made of paper and if you cut or tear it in half you will have two separate halves, yes? And these two separate halves will actually be separate, so that they can be placed in two separate pockets, yes? So, again, simply by joining the ends of the strip to form a band, can I cut or tear this paper in half, with a continuous cut from a pair of scissors, or a continuous tear, so that you will not be able unless by force of course to separate the two halves?
More incredibly, can I do this so that you don't actually have two halves at all? So that you actually still have one joined together strip? You bet. And here's how. Add 1 for each year after this, for example in use and Ask someone or a group: Spell the word 'silk'. They should spell out the letters: S, I, L, K. While sitting down or standing if you have good balance , lift your right foot off the floor and make clockwise circles with it.
At the same time, repeatedly draw the number 6 in the air with your right hand. Your foot will change direction and without an awful lot of practice, there's nothing you can do to prevent it. This effect seems to be because drawing the number 6 is effectively a counter-clockwise movement which the brain can't reconcile easily with a clockwise one a bit like patting your head and rubbing your stomach at the same time.
If you draw the six from the middle and end with the up-stroke instead, it doesn't conflict with the clockwise foot motion, because the 6 is now a clockwise motion too. What's strange is how we've evolved to enable same direction movements with different limbs, and to resist opposite ones - There doesn't seem to be a survival benefit from this, unless it's a bi-product of an overall more co-ordinated and therefore more efficient, quicker, athletic movement capability, which would of course have been a survival aid.
Now, think of a tool and a colour. Your answer is. Thanks M Ordway. Draw three houses in a horizontal row. Draw three utilities suppliers beneath them: Gas, Water, Electicity. You should now have six points or boxes on your sheet of paper or flip chart. The challenge is to connect each house to each utility supplier without any of the nine connection lines crossing. Think of a number between 1 and Multiply it by 9. If you have two digits add them together. Subtract 5. Think of a country that begins with that letter.
Think of an animal that begins with the second letter of that country. Thanks R Corovic. Do this sum in your head: Start with 1, Add Add 2, Add 1, You need just a few grains of salt. Make a tiny pile of salt on a flat surface and balance the egg on the pile. Then carefully blow away the excess salt, leaving just the few grains actually supporting the egg. Obviously this needs preparing in advance - if pressed to repeat the trick, place the egg down hard enough to break the shell, which will also enable it to balance.
You can prepare a banana so that when someone removes the skin the banana inside is already sliced:. You need just a clean pin. To make each slice, insert the pin through the banana skin, but not so deep as to enter the skin on the other side.
Move the pin sideways in a see-saw motion, using the entry point of the skin as a pivot. Replace the banana in the fruit bowl. A more sophisticated method is as follows: Use a needle and thread rather than a pin. The aim is to thread a loop around the banana under the skin for each slice required. You may remember Spot the Difference games in magazines when you were a kid.
Spot the Difference: Office Edition plays with a similar concept, but transplants the game to your real-life office. Spot the Difference: Office Edition is a fun brain teaser for teams because it transforms the office from a workplace to a puzzle. Also, any number of people can play, and you do not need specialized skills to win. Best of all, when team members rack their brains together, it facilitates team bonding.
Rebus or Bust is a fun brain teaser for teams, where you and your coworkers solve rebuses. Rebuses are words, illustrations, and symbols that represent words or phrases. To play this game, split your team into groups, and have the groups compete to solve rebuses as quickly as possible. You can create your own rebuses or look for rebuses online. The group that solves the most puzzles by the end of the game wins. Rebus or Bust is a great team building brain teaser because it spurs creative thinking, and your team needs to put their brains together to win.
Not only will your team have a great time, but the event will help develop employee friendships. Check out these example rebuses for inspiration. You can also transform Utilitarian Test into a debate-centered activity by splitting your team into two groups to present arguments for their choice.
Because you need to consider choosing from two controversial options, these group brain teasers are great team building games , which reveal a lot about how your team members think and what they value.
If you have seen videos where a complicated contraption accomplishes a simple task, then you have seen a Rube Goldberg machine. Rube Goldberg Off is a stellar brain teaser for team building, where teams compete to come up with the most inventive Rube Goldberg contraption.
To make judging between machines easier, set the task in advance that the mechanism needs to achieve, so all the Rube Goldberg machines have the same purpose. Rube Goldberg Off also works well for large group icebreakers that gives your team an opportunity to unleash their innovative spirit together, and taps back into a childlike appreciation for crafting and building things with their hands.
Have you ever noticed the hidden messages in logos? From FedEx to Toblerone, Fun with Logos asks your team to determine the hidden symbolism in famous logos. You can either compete in teams, or work together to spot the symbols. Fun with Logos is exciting because it gives logos that you see every day new context, and gets people to think outside the box. Your team members will have fun deciphering the logo imagery together, and gain some new knowledge through participating in this brain teaser.
Get started with these logos and their hidden meanings.
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