Brain Test Level 19 Walkthrough & Answer
Level 19★★★★★
## Question
**Brain Test Level 19:** Help the baby stop crying
## Answer
Shake your phone/device, or rapidly swipe across the screen.
## Step-by-Step Walkthrough
The baby needs to be rocked to sleep. Shake your physical phone or tablet gently as if rocking a cradle. On some versions, rapidly swiping back and forth on screen also works.
Here is exactly how to solve Brain Test Level 19:
1. Read the question carefully — Brain Test loves wordplay and misdirection.
2. Look at every element on screen, including the question text itself.
3. Shake your phone/device, or rapidly swipe across the screen.
4. If you are stuck, remember that Brain Test rewards lateral thinking over logical answers.
## Why It's Tricky
Brain Test Level 19 is designed to catch players who think too literally or too logically. The game's core mechanic is to subvert expectations. Most players fail this level on their first try because they approach it with conventional thinking. The key insight is that the game often uses the question text, physical phone gestures, or visual misdirection as part of the puzzle. Once you understand that Brain Test breaks the fourth wall regularly, these puzzles become much more manageable.
Tips
- Use physical phone gestures like shaking or tilting — Brain Test often uses your device's sensors.
- If your first instinct doesn't work, try the opposite approach — Brain Test loves to subvert expectations.
- Remember: Brain Test Level 19 has a difficulty rating of 1/5 — it should be solvable with a simple trick.
FAQ
- How do I solve Brain Test Level 19?
- Shake your phone/device, or rapidly swipe across the screen. This is one of the trickiest puzzles in Brain Test because it requires you to think outside the box rather than using straightforward logic.
- Why is Brain Test Level 19 so hard?
- Brain Test Level 19 ("Help the baby stop crying") tricks players by using misdirection. The game expects you to try the obvious answer first, which never works. The real solution involves lateral thinking — look at everything on screen, including the question text and UI elements.