Cheap report and vague payment options
Cheap report, questionable checkout experience
The $2 personality report itself was fine as light entertainment. It was long, visually distinctive, and contained a few memorable ideas, although much of it felt repetitive and more like personality lore than a serious psychological assessment.
My main issue is the purchasing process. The site advertised a dramatic “90% off” offer, while steering me toward a subscription model and presenting additional options that had to be carefully noticed and deselected. The pricing and extras did not feel transparent at a glance.
Yes, customers are responsible for reading what they agree to, and I chose to continue because the initial amount was only $2. But that low price is precisely what makes this kind of funnel effective: it discourages people from scrutinizing every option while potentially committing them to more than they expected.
I would not call the service a scam, because I received the report I purchased. However, the sales flow felt deliberately confusing and unnecessarily difficult to evaluate. I would recommend taking screenshots, checking every preselected option, and reading the subscription and cancellation terms carefully before paying.
Verdict: the report was harmless enough. The checkout design seriously reduced my trust in the company.








