It's impossible to see all the dots at the same time.
The 12 dots in the image are there permanently but they appear to flitter in and out of existence, with only the dot that we're focusing on being clearly visible at any one time. It's an optical illusion that's been confusing people for years, but fortunately, they are answers in the that it originated in, which was published by Jaques Ninio and Kent Stevens way back in the year 2000.
The black dot in the centre of your vision will usually be fairly clearly visible appear but the others seem to appear and disappear because we have fairly limited peripheral vision. Our brains fill in the detail on the edges of what enters our field of view, and confronted with a very regular pattern of lines, it assumes the surrounding image to be more of the same.
Another factor that makes the dots difficult to see is the amount of grey at the intersections where they're placed. This creates less contrast at those points, with more grey than white. This helps to obscure the small black dot in our peripheral version. We've seen plenty of other mind-bending optical illusions on TikTok on recently, including the work of an artist who's turned an entire barn into a