Work through short guided quizzes that help you think about work, dating, relationships, money, and life choices.
A should-I quiz is not a randomizer. It asks targeted questions, looks at the pattern of your answers, and gives a recommendation with context. That makes it better for decisions where the details matter: quitting a job, ending a relationship, moving out, asking for a raise, starting a business, or choosing a school path.
Use the hub when the question has emotional, financial, social, or timing tradeoffs. A random yes or no can break a tie, but it cannot tell whether burnout, money, safety, family pressure, or poor timing is driving the choice. The quiz pages help you separate those factors before you act.
Answer from your current reality, not the version of yourself you wish were true. If a question asks about savings, communication, commitment, or readiness, choose the answer that matches your behavior and constraints. The result is only useful if the inputs are honest.
Treat the verdict as a structured nudge. If the result says wait, ask what would need to change. If it says move forward, turn that into one next action this week. If you disagree with the result immediately, write down why. That resistance often points to the real decision underneath.
Use a randomizer when either outcome is acceptable and the real problem is hesitation. Use a guided quiz when the answer depends on conditions: savings, timing, trust, leverage, safety, energy, or family impact. The quiz format slows the decision down enough to expose those conditions before you treat the result as a direction.
A quiz result is most useful when it becomes a draft plan. Name the first action, the person you need to talk to, the information you still lack, and the date you will revisit the decision. That turns a vague verdict into something you can test.
The cards are grouped by the kind of pressure behind the question. Work and money pages focus on leverage, runway, and opportunity cost. Relationship pages focus on patterns, repair attempts, and alignment. Life path pages focus on readiness and reversibility. Start with the closest card, then use related decisions when your real question turns out to sit between two topics.
Use should-I quizzes for higher-context choices, the generator for quick binary calls, the wheel for visible group decisions, and question lists for conversation. Moving between those formats helps match the decision process to the stakes instead of treating every uncertainty the same way.
No. They are guided decision aids based on your answers. Use the generator or wheel if you want randomness.
Start with the page that matches the decision in front of you: work, relationships, money, school, independence, or dating.
No. It can organize the tradeoffs and suggest a direction, but the final choice still needs your judgment.
No. If safety, health, abuse, legal risk, or urgent money trouble is involved, get qualified help instead of relying on a quiz.
Lower-stakes questions can use lighter quizzes. Bigger life decisions need more questions and longer explanations.