Welcome to The Riddle Room — a growing collection of brain teasers, logic puzzles, and word riddles designed to stretch your thinking and spark your curiosity.
Each week, seven new puzzles join the list. Try solving it before you peek — every riddle comes with a hint and an answer hidden behind a dropdown, ready to reveal when you’ve had your fun.
Last Updated: 29-Nov-2025
Next Update: 6-Dec-2025
28. Dictionary Trick
What word is always spelled incorrectly?
The trick is in the wording.
Incorrectly
27. Two Fathers, Two Sons
Two fathers and two sons go fishing. Each catches one fish, yet they bring home only three fish. How is that possible?
Think family tree, not math.
They are grandfather, father, and son — that’s two fathers and two sons, but only three people.
26. Mysterious Being
I speak without a mouth and hear without ears. I have no body, but I come alive with wind. What am I?
You hear it in canyons and empty rooms.
An echo.
25. Shorter
What five-letter word becomes shorter when you add two letters to it?
Read it literally.
Short (add “er” and it becomes “shorter”).
24. The Two Doors
You face two doors. One leads to freedom, the other to a deadly trap. Two guards stand in front, one always tells the truth, the other always lies. You can ask one question to figure out which door to take. What do you ask?
Focus on what both would say about the same door.
Ask either guard: “If I asked the other guard which door leads to freedom, what would they say?” Then pick the opposite door.
23. The Light Switches
You are in a room with three light switches. In another room, there are three light bulbs, each controlled by one switch. You can only enter the room with the bulbs once. How can you figure out which switch controls which bulb?
Heat is your friend.
Turn on the first switch for a while, then turn it off. Turn on the second switch and leave the third off. Enter the room: the bulb that’s warm but off = first switch, the bulb that’s on = second switch, the cold bulb = third switch.
22. The River Crossing
A farmer needs to get a wolf, a goat, and a cabbage across a river. His boat can only carry him plus one other item. If left alone, the wolf will eat the goat, and the goat will eat the cabbage. How can he get everything across safely?
Think about what you can take back and forth, not just one-way.
Take the goat across first. Return alone. Take the wolf across. Bring the goat back. Take the cabbage across. Return alone. Finally, take the goat across.
21. How many months have 28 days?
How many months have 28 days?
Don’t overthink the calendar.
All of them!. Every month has at least 28 days.
20. Cat and Mouse
If five cats can catch five mice in five minutes, how long will it take one cat to catch one mouse?
How long does it take to cook one pizza if you have 20 ovens?
Five minutes.
19. Tennis Bet
Susan and Lisa decided to play tennis against each other. They bet $1 on each game they played. Susan won three bets, and Lisa won $5. How many games did they play?
How many games does Lisa need to win to profit 5$?
Eleven. Because Lisa lost three games to Susan, she lost $3 ($1 per game). So, she had to win back that $3 with three more games, then win another five games to win $5.
18. Fractional City
What is 3/7 chicken, 2/3 cat and 2/4 goat?
Look at the letters.
Chicago
17. Left Hand
What can you hold in your left hand but not in your right?
Think of something on your body that you can’t touch with your right hand no matter how hard you try.
Your right elbow.
16. Dirty Mind
What goes in hard and dry and comes out soft and wet.
Hey! It’s not what you think.
Pasta
15. Water Reservoir
The water level in a reservoir is low but doubles every day. It takes 60 days to fill the reservoir. How long does it take for the reservoir to become half-full?
It’s not 30. Try to think backwards. If it was full on day 60, how full was it the day before?
59 days. If the water level doubles every day, the reservoir on any given day is double the size it was the day prior. If the reservoir is full on day 60, that means it was half full on day 59, not on day 30.
14. Versatile Word
What 4-letter word can be written forward, backward or upside down, and can still be read from left to right?
Think in capital letters
NOON
13. Money Box
I have a large money box, 10 inches wide and 5 inches tall. Roughly how many coins can I place until my money box is no longer empty?
You don’t need to know any geometry. The answer is very simple.
Just one, after which it will no longer be empty.
12. Flipping Two Coins
Your friend flips two coins behind your back and tells you, “At least one of the coins came up tails.” What is the probability that both coins came up tails?
Think of all the possible outcomes for two coins. Then think of the possible outcomes, given your friend’s statement.
⅓. There are four possible outcomes when you flip two coins: HH, HT, TH, and TT. Because at least one of them is tails, that leaves you with only three possible outcomes. Out of these three, only one is TT. Thus, the probability is 1/3.
11. Ancient Coins
Suppose I show you two ancient coins. The first one is dated 51 B.C., the second one is marked George I. Which one is counterfeit?
What would people of that era think?
People were not using B.C. before Christ’s birth. And George I was just George, as there was no one else before him. They are both counterfeit.
10. Guess the age
When Adam was 10, Mark was half his age. Adam is now 30. How old is Mark?
Not 15!
Mark is 25 years old.
9. Guess the letter
Guess the next three letters in the series GTNTL.
The hint is in the prompt
I, T, S. The complete sequence is the first letter of every word in the prompt.
8. Dangerous Monster
What can be swallowed but can also swallow you?
A bit philosophical. Don’t think in a literal way.
Pride
7. Labyrinth Chase
You’re escaping a labyrinth, and there are three exits. Exit A leads to an inferno. Exit B leads to an assassin. Exit C leads to a lion that hasn’t eaten in 3 years. Which exit do you pick?
Try to think practically. One of the cases sounds worse than it is.
Exit C. If a lion hasn’t eaten in 3 years, it has definitely starved to death.
6. Running vs Walking
What kind of running means walking?
That one is just funny. It’s a simple worldplay.
Running out of gas.
5. Green House
A red house is made from red bricks. A blue house is made from blue bricks. A yellow house is made from yellow bricks. What is a greenhouse made from?
It’s obvious. Don’t think too much.
Glass.
4. Happy Wife
A woman shoots her husband. Then, she holds him underwater for over 5 minutes. Finally, she hangs him. But 5 minutes later, they both go out together and enjoy a wonderful dinner together. How can this be?
Some words have different meanings in different contexts.
The woman was a photographer. She shot a picture of her husband, developed it and hung it up to dry.
3. Painting Person
A man looks at a painting and says, “Brothers and sisters, I have none, but that man’s father is my father’s son.” Who is in the painting?
Think about how “my father’s son” might refer to the speaker himself.
It’s his son.
2. Mystery Captain
You are driving a big cruise boat. You leave Port 1 with 1000 passengers and 200 staff. At Port 2, 300 passengers get off, 250 passengers get on board, and 100 of the staff stay on Port 2 when the boat departs for Port 3. The distance between Port 2 and Port 3 is twice that of Port 1 and Port 2. The boat left with a full tank, had half a tank at Port 2, refilled it to 3/4, and made it to Port 3. How old is the captain?
Read it again!
You are the captain. Your age is the correct answer.
1. Manhole Covers
Why are manhole covers round?
There are many correct answers to that one. Try to think of practical reasons or why a different shape would not be a good choice.
Here are a few answers: 1. Round manhole covers cannot fall through the circular opening, but a square cover could. 2. They are easier to move because they can be rolled like a wheel.





