A four-hour, 100-question multiple-choice exam. Sounds easy? The twist: each question has between 3 and 10 correct answers. Partial credit is a myth. You either circle the exact combination of letters—A, C, E, G—or you get zero. One former finalist, Priya Chandrasekhar (2022), describes it as "taking a Scantron test while someone randomly changes the locks on the answer key."
For the uninitiated, the NatPlus Contest sounds like just another high school competition: a multidisciplinary exam promising scholarships, prestige, and a line on a college resume. But ask anyone who has made it to the National Finals, and they will tell you a different story. They will tell you about the maze. They will tell you about the "Dark Packet." They will tell you about the year the answer key was a lie.
This is not a standardized test. This is not a drill. This is the —known to its survivors simply as NatPlus . natplus contest
Eight students chose the Dark Packet. None solved a single problem fully. But four of them produced "metacognitive diaries" so brilliant—so creative in their failed approaches—that they were invited to a special research program at MIT. The Dark Packet has since become an opt-in legend. Every year, whispers circulate that the Dark Packet will return. Every year, a few brave souls raise their hands. For all its intellectual glamour, NatPlus has a darker reputation. The pressure is immense. In 2018, a finalist collapsed from exhaustion during the Synthesis round. In 2022, a survey of participants found that 68% reported clinical insomnia symptoms during contest week.
By J. S. Moreau
The infamous "Long Form." Students receive a 30-page booklet. The first 25 pages are source material: a fragment of a lost Greek play, a spreadsheet of epidemiological data from a fictional pandemic, a patent for a new type of battery, and a single photograph of an obscure 1927 political rally in Vienna. The last five pages contain four prompts. The catch: you cannot answer Prompt 4 without using information from Prompts 1–3, and the photograph from Vienna is a red herring (but no one knows which year they’ll remove it).
Instead of cancelling the round, Dr. Voss made a controversial decision. She let those students keep the Dark Packet. They could choose: attempt the impossible for triple points, or request a standard replacement with a 30-minute penalty. A four-hour, 100-question multiple-choice exam
Welcome to the most relentless, beautiful, and brutal academic contest you have never heard of. The NatPlus Contest was founded in 2008 by Dr. Helena Voss, a cognitive psychologist and former International Math Olympiad gold medalist. Her frustration was simple: existing contests, she argued, measured retrieval speed and narrow expertise. They rewarded the student who had memorized the most, not the one who could think the deepest.