If you pass this visual test, your ophthalmologist will probably give you 10/10 on both eyes. But will you be faster than the others?

If you love visual challenges and optical illusions, this new test circulating on social media might be for you. In this beautiful landscape of green hills in Asia, a tiger has taken up residence and is lounging before your eyes. But it will probably take you a while to spot it. When writing Linternaute, the average observed was established at 20 seconds, which is already very long!

You are ready ? Try to locate the hidden tiger in this image. If you’re a master of visual testing, start your timer and take to the game to find out if you’re faster than us. Feel free to click on the image to zoom.

It’s quite rare to find the answer to a test like this with a glance or even just looking at the picture. It is often necessary to take time to observe each element in depth. True amateurs even recommend cutting the proposed visual into sections, to be explored one by one in detail.

So, did you manage to see the tiger hidden in this landscape and more importantly how long did it take you? Share your time on our Facebook and challenge your friends to see if they can do better than you! Click here to share your score.

If you haven’t found the solution, know that the feline is at the bottom left of the photo, at an equal distance between the trunk of the tree in the foreground and the left edge of the image. Here is the test solution.

Did you know ? At the beginning of the 20th century, approximately 100,000 tigers ruled the forests of Asia, in the rainforests, mangroves and swamps. But over the decades, their condition has deteriorated sharply. The poaching caused by the fascination that the tiger arouses in men, a powerful international traffic, but also the massive deforestation which will deprive it of its prey, will drastically reduce the population of the largest feline in the world. This was estimated in 2010 at only 3200 individuals. But political and environmental efforts have made it possible to curb the phenomenon: in 2016, 3,900 animals were counted with increasing numbers in India, Nepal and Russia. Another count even estimated the tiger population at between 3726 and 5578 individuals.