PLAYERS of The 1% Club struggled with a tricky butterfly picture question – but would you know the answer?
On the smash-hit ITV quiz show, Lee Mack tests members of the public on their logic, reasoning skills, and common sense.



One hundred players are whittled down as they compete to make it to the last question.
The final round is tough as it is something that only one percent of the country can get right.
But on one recent episode of The 1% Club, it seems that many players struggled with one particular question.
Lee Mack moved onto the 60 percent question and 94 players were still in the game.
At this point, there was only a £6K jackpot prize as the presenter joked: “You’re ruining the format!”
It was a picture question, and players had to compare and contrast three images in a very short time period.
He asked: “Which of these Butterflies is exactly the same on both sides?”
Three seemingly symmetrical bugs were shown on screen, but only one was exactly the same on both sides.
A whopping 14 players could not spot the differences in the other butterflies.
Lee Mack looked absolutely shocked as he remarked: “Wow, we lost 14 of you there, let’s look at the answer.”
It was the second blue butterfly image which was the correct answer to the tough question.
The first orange bug was missing an antenna which made it asymmetrical.
Meanwhile, the third green butterfly had subtle differences in the spotted wing pattern.
As such the prize pot increased to £20,000 because so many players were eliminated.


The 1% Club continues on ITV and is available to stream on ITVX.