Higher or lower? Sounds easy. It's not.
Get your read — free on iPhoneAbove average pitch discrimination. You probably play an instrument, sing in tune, or just have naturally gifted ears. You can tell when something's slightly off — a guitar string that's almost but not quite tuned, a singer who's flat by a tiny amount, background music that changed key. Your ears pick up on subtleties that most people completely miss. You'd do well in music production, audio engineering, or just winning arguments about what note something is.
Bestie. The first round had a MASSIVE difference and you still guessed wrong. Your ears are out here choosing chaos. You're the person who sings confidently in the car but everyone else is silently suffering. You think you're hitting the notes. You are not hitting the notes. But you know what? Confidence is key and you have that in abundance. Keep singing. Just maybe not at karaoke. Please.
You can tell when notes are obviously different but the subtle stuff goes right over your head. And through your ears. Without registering. You enjoy music normally, you can tell when someone's singing off-key (if it's REALLY off-key), and you have a functioning relationship with sound. You're in the majority. Most people land here. Your ears are baseline human ears doing baseline human things.
Scoring 8-9 means you detected tone differences of 2-3Hz. That is INSANE. Most humans can't hear differences that small. You either have years of musical training, natural perfect pitch, or ears that belong in a laboratory being studied. You can probably identify notes by name, tell when a song is played in a different key, and it physically pains you when something is out of tune. Your ears are not just good — they're exceptional. The world sounds different to you than it does to everyone else.
You got every single one right. Including the round where the difference was ONE HERTZ. That's a frequency difference so small it's at the absolute edge of what human ears can theoretically detect. You don't just hear music — you feel it vibrating in your atoms. You are the instrument. You hear the world in frequencies the rest of us are deaf to. Every out-of-tune note is a personal attack. Every perfect chord is a religious experience. You should be making music, mixing music, or at minimum running the aux at every party forever.
Open Caught, pick this read, answer a short set of AI-built questions. The Eye watches the pattern — not the answers you think you gave — and writes your verdict.