Wait—let me stop the confusion. Let me just give you the straightforward truth:

The "66" isn't a number to solve; it's a label. The question is asking: "What is the answer to (question number) 66?" And if you look up the answer to Question 66 in any walkthrough, you'll find it’s 12 . It’s a self-referential paradox. The only way to know the answer is to already know the answer.

Remember the title of the game? The Impossible Quiz . Now, think back to earlier in the game.

And the answer to Question 66... is the answer you’re looking for right now. But the game isn't asking you to refer to itself directly. It’s a trick: the question number is a . In the twisted logic of the quiz, the number 66 is a disguised reference to Question 12 (because 6 + 6 = 12? Not exactly).

Yes, you read that correctly. 12. Here’s where The Impossible Quiz plays its cruelest trick yet. This question is not asking for the numerical value of the number 66. It’s a metareference to the quiz itself.

If you’ve played The Impossible Quiz , you know the rules: logic is optional, frustration is guaranteed, and your mouse is a ticking time bomb. By the time you reach Question 66 , you’ve already been blown up, mauled by a dog, and forced to remember the color of a book that doesn’t exist.

The game laughs at your mathematical certainty. Clicking 66 will trigger a loud buzzer, and you’ll lose a life. The Real Answer The correct answer is D: 12 .

The key is in the phrasing: "What is the answer to 66?" means — but that’s circular. Instead, the game wants you to interpret it as: "What is the answer to question number 66 of The Impossible Quiz?"