Bias recognition is step one. Thinking Trap Escape adds step two: escape. Each challenge places you inside a realistic trap, then asks what move would actually break the pattern before it compounds.
This makes the mode more applied than Bias Hunter. It is not about vocabulary fluency alone; it is about choosing the corrective action that would have changed the outcome.
This trains
Debiasing under pressure
Applying the right escape move once a trap has been identified inside a realistic decision context.
How a session feels
3 steps, 3–5 minutes. Repeat until the feedback starts shaping your instincts.
- 1
Enter the trap
You read a scenario where a bias or reasoning failure is already active.
- 2
Choose the escape
You pick the intervention that best interrupts the pattern.
- 3
Generalize the move
Feedback explains how to reuse that intervention outside the challenge.
Who it's for
- Users who already know the bias names and want application
- People who notice traps only after damage is done
- Teams training practical debiasing, not theory alone
Try a challenge — no sign-up
The demo pulls from the public challenge bank. Your confidence rating and result are the same mechanics you'll see in the real mode.
Start with Thinking Trap Escape
Your first session generates a score baseline in under 10 minutes.