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On a rain-slicked Tuesday evening in a nondescript convention hall outside Chicago, three hundred teenagers sit in perfect silence. The only sounds are the scratch of pencils, the hum of industrial HVAC units, and the occasional, stifled sob. A timer on the wall ticks down from 180 minutes.
This is not a standardized test. This is not a drill. This is the —known to its survivors simply as NatPlus . natplus contest
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. On a rain-slicked Tuesday evening in a nondescript
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. This is not a standardized test
Defenders counter that NatPlus is honest about the world. "Real research doesn't come with a study guide," says two-time champion Leo Zhang (now a PhD candidate in theoretical physics). "You get incomplete data, contradictory instructions, and a ticking clock. NatPlus isn't cruel. It's real."
Critics call NatPlus "academic hazing." Dr. Marcus Thorne, an education professor at Stanford, argues: "The 'Plus' is just trauma with a fancy name. We are teaching kids that self-destruction is a virtue. No problem set is worth a panic attack."