The Puzzle Setup
Four numbered people, each in a different situation with a potential hazard:
Person 1: Standing under a tree during a lightning storm.
Person 2: Walking near a manhole cover that appears loose or missing.
Person 3: Using a drill or power tool near water or a wet surface.
Person 4: Standing on railroad tracks with a train approaching in the distance.
Analyzing Each Person’s Risk
Let me evaluate each scenario from a safety perspective.
Person 1 – Under a tree during lightning: Trees are dangerous during lightning storms. Lightning strikes the tallest object, and if it hits the tree, the electrical charge can travel through the tree and ground, injuring or killing anyone nearby. This is a high-risk situation. Not safe.
Person 2 – Near a missing manhole cover: This person could fall into an open manhole if they’re not paying attention. However, they’re walking on solid ground and presumably can see the hazard. With awareness, they can avoid it. Moderately safe, but risky.
Person 3 – Using a drill near water or wet surface: Electricity and water are a deadly combination. If the drill is plugged in and the surface is wet, there’s a serious risk of electrocution. This is a high-risk situation. Not safe.
Person 4 – On railroad tracks with a train approaching: This person appears to be standing on the tracks with a train visible in the distance. Trains cannot stop quickly. This is extremely dangerous and likely fatal. Not safe.
The Trick (Why This Puzzle Is Deceptive)
The puzzle plays on two things:
Immediate vs. ongoing hazards. Person 2 (manhole) has a hazard they can see and avoid. Person 4 (train) has time to move, but the train is coming. Person 1 and 3 face immediate, unavoidable dangers (lightning and electrocution).
Which hazard is most likely to cause immediate harm right now. Person 4 sees the train and can step off the tracks. Person 2 sees the missing manhole and can walk around it. Person 1 is already under the tree during an active lightning storm—the danger is immediate and unavoidable. Person 3 is already using a drill near water—if the drill is plugged in, the danger is immediate.
The Most Common Answer
The widely accepted answer to this viral puzzle is Person 2—the person near the manhole cover.
Why? Because:
Person 1 is already under a tree during lightning (immediate danger)
Person 3 is already using electricity near water (immediate danger)
Person 4 is on train tracks with a train approaching (immediate danger)
Person 2 is near a hazard but not yet in it—they can see the open manhole and walk around it
The puzzle tests whether you recognize that a visible, avoidable hazard is less dangerous than an invisible or unavoidable one.
My Final Answer (No Second Guesses)
Based on the scenarios described and the logic of the viral puzzle, the safest person is:
Person 2
The missing manhole cover is a hazard, but it’s visible. Person 2 can simply walk around it. The other three are in immediate, unavoidable danger (lightning, electrocution, train).
No second guesses. That’s my final answer.
Now I’d love to hear from you. Did you choose Person 2? Or did you pick someone else? What was your reasoning? Drop a comment below – I read every single one.