Internet puzzles have a way of turning the simplest image into a full-blown debate, and this skirt puzzle is a perfect example. At first glance, it looks easy. You see a skirt, a couple of obvious tears, and a question that seems straightforward: How many holes are in the skirt? But within seconds, people begin second-guessing themselves, zooming in, counting again, and defending totally different answers.
That is exactly why this image has become such a fun brain teaser online.
The puzzle asks viewers to count the holes in the skirt, with answer choices ranging from 2 to 7. Some people immediately say 2, because they only count the two large visible tears on the front. Others say 4, arguing that each visible tear goes through both the front and back of the fabric, so the total doubles. Then there are people who count the waistband opening and the bottom opening as well, which pushes the number even higher.
Suddenly, a simple image becomes a logic challenge.
What makes this kind of puzzle so addictive is that it tests more than eyesight. It also tests how you define the word hole. Are you only counting damaged areas? Are you counting every opening in the garment? Do the two drawstring openings near the waistband count too? That is where opinions split, and the comments usually become even more entertaining than the image itself.
One popular way to break it down is like this: there is one opening at the top where a person puts the skirt on, one opening at the bottom, and two visible tears on the fabric. If those tears go completely through the material, then they may count as four holes instead of two, because the front and back would both be torn. Some viewers also include the two small drawstring holes near the waistband. Depending on the logic used, the total changes fast.

That is why so many people arrive at different answers and still feel completely correct.
Of course, the line in the image that says the answer “determines if you’re a narcissist” is just clickbait-style humor. A picture puzzle cannot diagnose anyone’s personality, mental health, or character. The real purpose is simply to grab attention and make people curious enough to stop scrolling. And to be fair, it works.
These viral visual riddles do well because they create instant engagement. People love sharing their answer, defending it, and seeing whether others agree. Even when the puzzle has no official solution, it still succeeds because it starts conversation. In a way, that is the whole point. The image is less about being “right” and more about making people think twice about something they assumed was obvious.
Another reason puzzles like this spread so quickly is that they make viewers feel involved. Anyone can participate. You do not need special knowledge, advanced math, or deep analysis. All you need is a few seconds, a sharp eye, and a willingness to argue over tiny details.
So what is the best answer?
It depends on how strictly you define a hole. If you only count the large torn areas, you may say 2. If you count both sides of those tears, you may say 4. If you include the natural openings of the skirt and possibly the drawstring holes, your answer can rise even more. That is what makes the puzzle interesting: it is not just testing your eyes, but your reasoning.
In the end, the real challenge is not the skirt.
It is how your mind chooses to count what it sees.

