See what our quiz questions look like. Each category below shows one example question. The full quiz includes 10 randomized questions from a bank of 25+ per topic.
A new gaming friend has been chatting with you for two months. They never asked for photos, never said anything inappropriate, and never asked to meet. Today they send you $50 in Roblox gift cards "just because." A week later they send you another $50 with no explanation. They never bring up the gifts or expect anything in return. What's actually happening?
You get a Discord DM from someone with the exact same username as the Discord developer team. Their profile picture is the official Discord logo. They tell you your account violated terms and link you to an appeal form on discord.gift/appeal β a real Discord-owned domain. What's actually happening?
You wake up to a Snapchat from your best friend: "OMG I need help β I posted something embarrassing and I need you to log into my account and delete it before my parents see, please please I'll explain later." They send a link to "Snapchat Login Helper" so you can access their account. You and this friend have been close for years. What's actually happening?
Your phone rings from a number you don't recognize. You answer. There's a brief pause, then a voice says "can you hear me?" β and waits for you to respond. What's the smartest move?
A new gaming friend has been chatting with you for two months. They never asked for photos, never said anything inappropriate, and never asked to meet. Today they send you $50 in Roblox gift cards "just because." A week later they send you another $50 with no explanation. They never bring up the gifts or expect anything in return. What's actually happening?
You're playing a popular game and a player on the enemy team starts dominating. After the match, they message you saying "nice game" and offer to share their "config file" β the settings file that controls how their game runs. They say it'll improve your aim. The file is just a text file, not a program. What's the risk?
A creator you follow on TikTok pins a comment under their newest video saying "I'm reading and replying to everyone today!" Within minutes, the same creator's account replies to your comment with "DM me, I have something for you π". The reply is on the real creator's verified account. What's actually happening?
You wake up to a Snapchat from your best friend: "OMG I need help β I posted something embarrassing and I need you to log into my account and delete it before my parents see, please please I'll explain later." They send a link to "Snapchat Login Helper" so you can access their account. You and this friend have been close for years. What's actually happening?
A friend sends you a video on Snapchat showing your other friend Alex saying something really mean about you. The video looks completely real β Alex's voice, face, mannerisms, even the bedroom you've seen on their stories. Your friend says they 'had to show you' because they 'thought you should know.' What's the most likely explanation?
A representative from your Medicare plan calls. They confirm your full name, address, the last four digits of your Medicare number, and the name of your primary doctor. They explain that Medicare is issuing new 'chip-enabled' cards and they need to verify your full Medicare number to ship yours. They warn that without the new card, your coverage lapses January 1st. What's actually happening?
A creator you watch on YouTube does a live stream announcing their official NFT collection launch is happening right now β only 1,000 NFTs, first come first served. You can see the creator on camera, talking live, answering chat questions in real time. The link in the description goes to a clean-looking minting site with the creator's branding. The countdown timer shows 4 minutes left. What's the actual scam?
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