A guy has gone viral on social media after questioning users if they can spot a sniper in 30 seconds.
TikTok user Nathan Daniels - who goes by the handle @tnate44432 on the social media platform - posted a video asking users on the social media platform with the caption: Can you spot the sniper? And trust me, this sly assassin is doing a very good job disguising themselves.
The clip shows what appears to be a still image but is actually video, with the skilled marksman taking cover from a distance, somewhere in the background.
So, can you spot the sniper?Nathan shares a lot of videos challenging the viewer to "spot the sniper", but this particular video garnered a lot of attention from users on the platform, amassing over 555,000 views and receiving more than 12,000 likes.
The footage left users of the social media platform slumped as they tried to spot the sniper in the time limit provided.
One user asked: "How are we supposed to spot the sniper when he’s hiding behind a rock?" Another said: "It’s so hard."
A third joked: "Welp I’m dead."



However, for some users, spotting the sniper was not a challenge for them.
One user wrote: "Right there." And another said: "This is the first time I ever saw him before he moved."
A third said that spotting a sniper on camera is different from real life, writing, "To be fair. No one can see that because it’s a camera. Real-life it would be a lot easier to spot him."



If you spotted the deadly sniper hiding among the rocks before the 30 seconds ran out, then congratulations - you live t see another day.
People love a good challenge. In the last couple of weeks, you may have come across mind-bending images on various social media platforms like the hidden tiger in this illusion or the animal in this illusion.
Beyond their entertainment value, Michael Bach, a vision scientist, and professor of neuron biophysics at the University of Freiburg Eye Hospital in Freiburg, Germany said optical illusions widens "the mental horizons and makes it clear that things are a little different than they seem".