MyIQ analysis shows 43% of young users report burnout from self-testing

For a generation steeped in personality quizzes, brain-training apps, & algorithmic self-analysis, knowing oneself is no longer a quiet act of reflection; it's a high-frequency mental audit. New data from MyIQ suggests costs are beginning to show.
By: MyIQ.com
 
CLAYMONT, Del. - Nov. 28, 2025 - PRLog -- Over the past decade, self-measurement tools have gone mainstream, but new MyIQ data shows this constant introspection may be causing emotional strain. In a 2025 survey of 20,000 people, 43% of users aged 18-36 experienced "hyper-introspective fatigue" within a week of receiving results, and 62% said their scores made them question recent life choices.

Nearly a third saw a drop in confidence. With personality trends and "brain-hacking" content everywhere, people feel pressured to keep evaluating themselves, creating a feedback loop where identity feels unstable. MyIQ argues the problem isn't self-knowledge itself, but unstructured, context-free testing.

The platform promotes paced, personalised insights to help people understand, not scrutinise, themselves. Launched in 2024, MyIQ now has over a million users and 9M+ completed tests across cognitive, personality, and relationship categories, offering structured feedback and expert learning tools.

Please read the full press release through this link: https://cooperative-agency.prowly.com/418759-myiq-analysi...

Contact
Sophie de Villiers
pr@myiq.com
End
Source:MyIQ.com
Email:***@myiq.com
Tags:Burnout
Industry:Health
Location:Claymont - Delaware - United States
Subject:Reports
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