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Apex Cognitive Test
Welcome to the Apex Cognitive Test
This test measures your cognitive tendencies across 7 real-world domains. There are no right or wrong answers — just answer honestly. Estimated time: 8–10 minutes.
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Q1. You’re faced with a complex situation with no clear solution. What’s your natural response?
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Q1. You’re faced with a complex situation with no clear solution. What’s your natural response?
A
Break it down into manageable steps and decide your next move
B
Pause and ask yourself what you might be missing or misjudging
C
Look at both sides of the issue and search for a deeper middle ground
D
Pay attention to the emotional tone or recurring themes that might reveal something deeper
Q2. Someone shares a story that seems mundane. How do you engage?
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Q2. Someone shares a story that seems mundane. How do you engage?
A
You notice patterns or inconsistencies and try to interpret what’s really going on
B
You reflect on how they’re framing the story — and what that reveals about them
C
You ask clarifying questions to understand the context and timeline
D
You sense that the story might reflect something deeper — like a need for approval, or fear of failure
Q3. When making an important decision, what matters most?
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Q3. When making an important decision, what matters most?
A
The long-term consequences and sustainability of the choice
B
The internal clarity and self-awareness behind the decision
C
How it will affect others and whether it aligns with your moral compass
D
Whether it fits logically within your overarching strategy or plan
Q4. You hear two opposing arguments. Both are intelligent, both flawed. What do you do?
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Q4. You hear two opposing arguments. Both are intelligent, both flawed. What do you do?
A
Search for the contradictions, then look for a reconciling third option
B
Consider which side aligns better with your long-term vision
C
Reflect on your own reaction — why are you drawn to or resistant to one side?
D
Ask: What core principle or value underpins each view?
Q5. You witness someone behaving strangely in a group. Your mind instinctively…
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Q5. You witness someone behaving strangely in a group. Your mind instinctively…
A
Wonders what hidden motives might be driving their behaviour
B
Tries to make sense of their actions based on what you know about their past behaviour or personality
C
Reads their body language, tone, and energy to pick up what they’re not saying
D
Looks at how their behaviour might affect the group dynamic or balance of power
Q6. You’re given new information, but it feels incomplete. What’s your next move?
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Q6. You’re given new information, but it feels incomplete. What’s your next move?
A
Look for the patterns or structure behind it — how the pieces fit together
B
Ask what might be missing, or what assumptions are shaping how it’s being presented
C
Consider how the information could affect people or ethical outcomes
D
Try to translate the data into something that resonates — a story, metaphor, or real-life example
Q7. What frustrates you most in everyday conversations?
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Q7. What frustrates you most in everyday conversations?
A
When people fail to think long-term or consider future impact
B
When they’re stuck in black-and-white thinking
C
When they avoid personal reflection or can’t articulate why they believe something
D
When they focus on facts but miss the meaning or subtext
Q8. How do you typically learn best?
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Q8. How do you typically learn best?
A
Through internal reflection and cross-referencing your own thoughts
B
Through case studies, role models, or narrative
C
Through real-time feedback and experimenting with plans
D
Through asking “why” until you hit the system beneath the surface
Q9. You’re told to mentor someone younger. Your focus is on…
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Q9. You’re told to mentor someone younger. Your focus is on…
A
Helping them structure their thinking and plan for what’s ahead
B
Helping them become aware of their own habits of thought
C
Helping them balance confidence with humility — learning from all sides
D
Helping them understand their deeper motives and internal story
Q10. You’re in a room of strong personalities with different values. You feel most drawn to…
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Q10. You’re in a room of strong personalities with different values. You feel most drawn to…
A
Understanding who holds influence, and why
B
Picking up on subtle cues — tone, phrasing, emotions — to understand the unspoken dynamics
C
Creating space for different perspectives to be explored and respected
D
Sensing who is being honest, and who is posturing
Q11. You read an ancient myth or story. What stands out most?
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Q11. You read an ancient myth or story. What stands out most?
A
How the characters represent deeper patterns of human psychology
B
The moral lessons or ethical challenges the story raises
C
The historical context and how it still applies today
D
The logic or structure beneath the story’s events
Q12. You're under pressure and must act quickly. You tend to…
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Q12. You're under pressure and must act quickly. You tend to…
A
Trust your long-range instincts and ask: “What will this look like in a month?”
B
Pause to observe your own reactions and adjust your state
C
Revert to strategy — minimise risk, maximise control
D
Act on intuition, guided by what feels most symbolically aligned
Q13. You’re in conflict with someone. Your instinct is to…
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Q13. You’re in conflict with someone. Your instinct is to…
A
Understand how they’re thinking, not just what they’re saying
B
Explore the deeper emotional and moral undercurrents
C
Frame your argument using structure and logic
D
Consider the paradox: how can both of you be “right” in different ways?
Reveal Your Archetype