Yeah, IQ tests are weird. I know I had some when first in school, then I was put in the advanced classes along with a class once a week where a few of us were pulled into another classroom and constantly given brain games, basically. It got to feeling weird. At that time, I was reading ENDER'S GAME, haha, and I started having worries about what was going to eventually become of it all. Oops. I suddenly changed schools, and then I didn't take another IQ test until the military testing that gets mandated for USA high school kids. Per the military, I scored a 212, which they said equated to 166 in other standards for intelligence quotient. I didn't focus or worry about it. What was of worry, is that I was suddenly asked to take another test with about a hundred or so other kids a few weeks later. I was then suddenly told to meet at this hotel lobby for other testing. It wound up, and this is still so weird to me, that I was in a paid room with just one other kid taking another lengthy test, while the door was purposely open with two uniformed military (I think it was ARMY) guys standing outside the threshold of the door.
No one besides the Air Force called me after that. Everything they said was about intelligence fields, and I was actually willing to do it. My senior year of high school then started, and I tore three knee ligaments playing football (I was a field goal kicker - if your plant foot slides forward in the mud, you kick the ground instead of the ball and bend your knee sideways - I don't advise it - it sucks).
I rambled. Sorry. Long story short: I know that IQ is like a speed of application to get the correct answer kind of rating only. I've never felt that it was something that meant someone was way, way smarter than most at every single thing, every single moment.