We'll expose your flags. All of them.
Get your read — free on iPhoneLook, at least you're honest about it. You've got patterns — the stalking, the game-playing, the passive-aggression. But here's the thing: knowing your flags is the first step to pulling them down. Most people don't even know they're waving red flags. You do. That self-awareness? Actually a green flag.
You're a beautiful contradiction. Sometimes secure, sometimes chaotic. You give great advice to friends and then ignore it completely. Your green flags and red flags take turns running the show depending on who you're dating. You're not toxic — you're just... human. A messy, complicated, trying-their-best human.
You're a good one. Healthy communication, reasonable boundaries, actual emotional intelligence. But you've got 1-2 flags tucked away that come out under stress or when someone triggers your attachment style. Self-aware enough to manage them. That's what matters.
Bestie. The phone-checking, the game-playing, the strategic crying, the 2019 stalking — this is a masterclass in red flag behavior. But you know what? You KNOW. And that's honestly more self-aware than 90% of people. The question isn't whether you have red flags. It's whether you want to keep them flying.
You communicate, you trust, you don't play games. In a world of red flags, you're practically a unicorn. People either love you or don't believe you're real. Your only risk? Being too healthy for people who aren't ready for you.
Open Caught, pick this read, answer a short set of AI-built questions. The Eye watches the pattern — not the answers you think you gave — and writes your verdict.