Quiz: Do You Live in a Bubble?

You wake up to discover: you’ve spent the last five years living inside a giant soap bubble. All your friends think just like you do. The news you read confirms your beliefs. Music, movies, books – everything resonates with your worldview. Does this sound comforting? Or terrifying?
Our “Do You Live in a Bubble?” quiz will help you understand just how airtight your information cocoon really is. But before you click on the first question, let’s explore why this question is even worth asking.
Questions Overview 🧠
- The same 2-3 news sources I always trust
- My preferred sources first, then maybe one opposing viewpoint
- Multiple sources including international outlets
- A wide range including citizen journalists, foreign press, and local community voices
- Politely decline - it's not really your thing
- Stop by briefly to be neighborly but don't stay long
- Attend with genuine interest and try several new things
- Help them organize it and invite others from different communities
- Rarely - my social circle is mostly in my economic bracket
- Occasionally through work or service encounters
- Regularly - I maintain friendships across economic lines
- Daily - my community involvement ensures constant economic diversity
- Avoid it completely and mock it with like-minded friends
- Watch clips later to confirm why you disagree
- Attend to understand their supporters' perspectives
- Organize a discussion group afterward with attendees from both sides
- Content that perfectly aligns with my interests and beliefs
- Mostly familiar content with occasional surprises
- A mix because I actively follow diverse accounts
- Constantly challenging content because I regularly reset my preferences
- A neighborhood where people share my values and lifestyle
- Convenience and safety, with some diversity as a bonus
- A genuinely mixed community with different backgrounds
- The most culturally and economically diverse area possible
- Distance yourself from them gradually
- Avoid that topic to preserve the friendship
- Have honest discussions to understand their perspective
- Use it as an opportunity to examine your own assumptions
- Just my native language
- My language plus bits of another in media or signs
- Three or more through work, community, or intentional exposure
- Multiple daily through diverse community engagement
- Find a new favorite serving familiar food
- Try it once out of curiosity
- Research the cuisine and become a regular
- Learn to cook some dishes and share with others
- Defend your position and find sources that support it
- Listen politely but probably won't change your mind
- Research their claims thoroughly before responding
- Thank them and reevaluate your entire framework
- Media portrayals and assumptions
- Occasional interactions and observations
- Direct relationships and conversations
- Personal experience across multiple economic situations
- Maintain polite distance to avoid awkwardness
- Exchange pleasantries but keep interactions surface-level
- Learn about their practices and share your own
- Find ways to celebrate both your traditions together
- Rarely - I stick to what I know I'll enjoy
- A few times a year when highly recommended
- Monthly, as part of broadening my perspective
- Weekly - it's essential to my media diet
- Complain privately to those who share your view
- Follow it reluctantly without trying to understand
- Seek education about the cultural context
- Facilitate discussions to help everyone understand different perspectives
- All-inclusive resorts or familiar hotel chains
- Tourist areas with occasional local restaurant visits
- Mixing tourist sites with local neighborhoods and customs
- Complete immersion in local life, avoiding tourist areas







