Assessment
The relationship readiness test
There are dozens of relationship quizzes. Most of them tell you what you already suspected, in language vague enough to mean almost anything. This one is different — not because the questions are harder, but because the output is.
What separates a test from a quiz
A quiz gives you a type. An introvert or an extrovert, a giver or a taker, secure or anxious or avoidant. The type is a shorthand for a cluster of traits, and clusters are useful — they orient you. But they don't score you. They don't tell you how far you are from where you want to be, or which specific dimension is doing the most damage to your results.
A test produces a number. Numbers are comparable, trackable, and specific. A 58 means something different from a 72. A 45 in Emotional Readiness combined with an 80 in Values Alignment tells you something precise about where to focus. That's the difference between a label and a lever.
Soulbound is built as a psychometric assessment, not a quiz. The five dimensions are scored individually on a 0–100 scale. The composite is your Soulmate Probability Score — a number that reflects your overall relationship readiness with enough resolution to act on.
What the test measures
The five dimensions were chosen because they represent the distinct areas where relationship capacity either holds or breaks down. They're not redundant — someone can be strong in three and struggling in two, and the two that are struggling can be very different problems.
Attachment Style
How you respond to emotional closeness — the patterns that activate when someone gets close or pulls away. Attachment style shapes the texture of almost every relationship dynamic, often below conscious awareness.
Emotional Readiness
Your capacity to show up with emotional depth — to regulate under pressure, to stay present during difficulty, to receive care without deflecting it. Emotional depth isn't a personality trait. It's a capacity that develops through experience and can be deliberately built.
Values Alignment
How clearly you know what you need from a partnership, and how reliably that clarity shows up in your choices. Values misalignment is often the last thing people diagnose and the first thing that matters.
Relational History
The patterns in your relationship history — what's repeated, what's been resolved, what's still running in the background. This dimension isn't about the past for its own sake. It's about whether the past is still steering.
Life Readiness
The circumstances that determine how much of yourself you can actually bring to a relationship — stability, bandwidth, support systems. Emotional capacity exists inside a life. Life Readiness measures that container.
How it works
Soulbound isn't a form. It's a short guided conversation — five questions designed to surface the information the scoring model needs. The questions are direct. You answer honestly. One API call processes all five responses together and produces your dimensional scores, composite score, and a personalised narrative.
The whole thing takes about five minutes. The score is free. If you want the full dimensional report — with the complete narrative, all five sub-scores, and your single identified growth lever — that's available for $4.99.
Who takes this test
The people who find this assessment most useful tend to share a few things: they've done some self-reflection already, they're at an inflection point (a breakup, a new relationship, a noticed pattern), and they're looking for something more specific than another framework or label.
They've usually already tried therapy, personality tests, or attachment style content. They're not looking for a category. They're looking for a score they can actually use.
What the score doesn't tell you
The score is not a verdict on whether you should be in a relationship. It's not a ranking of your worth as a partner. A low score doesn't mean you're broken — it means specific dimensions are further from where they could be, and those dimensions are identifiable and workable.
The score is a position. Not a sentence.