THIS is the tricky 1% Club question that saw 18 people use their pass to scrape through to the next round.
The fronted gameshow tests players on their logic, reasoning skills, and common sense.


On , 100 players get whittled down round by round as they compete to make it to the final question.
When it got to the question for 50%, he asked: “What three-word scientific phrase is represented below?”
There were two icons, of two angry looking male cartoons and a silhouette icon of an airplane.
The correct answer to the question on ITV was a well-known phrase, ‘Fight or flight.”
Two people were eliminated, but 18 people survived by using their one allotted pass to get through the round.
As such, the jackpot prize then increased to £40,000.
The show is full of tricky questions, as many competitors struggled to get in the very same episode.
Ninety-four players made it to the 60% question with just a £6K jackpot prize.
Lee Mack joked with all the players: “You're ruining the format!”
Players had to compare and contrast three images of different butterflies in the given time period.
The host then asked: “Which of these Butterflies is exactly the same on both sides?”
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.
A whopping 14 players could not spot the differences in the other butterflies.


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