If you slow down, the steps line up differently. To fry eggs, you have to break them first, and to eat them, they have to already be cooked. That means the same two eggs were broken, then fried, then eaten—one set of eggs going through three actions, not three separate sets.
So the answer is four. You started with six eggs, only two were actually used, and the remaining four were never touched. This riddle is a good reminder that careful reading often matters more than quick math. Once this detail becomes clear, the solution is simple. You started with six eggs, used only two, and the remaining four were never touched. Therefore, four eggs are still left. This small but clever riddle is a fun reminder that good problem-solving often depends more on careful reading and logical reasoning than on quick calculations.
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