100-prompt aesthetic checklist
Performative Purity Test
Check the prompts that sound like your clothes, cafe rituals, media taste, posts, objects, and scene behavior. The result shows your checked count, a classic purity-style score, and a few category highlights without making the quiz more serious than it is.
What this test measures
This page looks at self-presentation through visible cues: clothes, drink rituals, playlists, books, captions, events, and the small objects people use to make taste readable. It is about the gap between sincere preference and a persona that has learned how to introduce itself.
The score is intentionally light. A higher checked count means more of the listed behaviors apply to you. The purity-style number goes the other way, so fewer checked items produce a higher score.
How to use the result
Take the checklist privately, compare only if you want to, and read the result as a description of public signals rather than a verdict about who you are.
Take the classic Rice Purity TestHow to take the test
1. Check what fits
Mark the prompts that match your style signals, media habits, objects, posts, cafe rituals, or scene behavior.
2. Calculate the result
Submit the checklist to see your checked count and the inverted purity-style score in the same page.
3. Read the highlights
Use the result title, short interpretation, and three category counts as playful context before sharing or retaking.
Result ranges
The ranges below use checked items because they are easier to read than inverted score math. Your displayed purity score is always 100 minus the number of boxes you checked.
0-10 checked: Actually Low-Key
Barely curated. Your choices read mostly practical. A few details may have a vibe, but the overall effect is not trying to turn every errand into an aesthetic statement.
11-20 checked: Accidentally Aesthetic
Quietly styled. You have some taste markers, but they do not run the whole show. The signal is there, just quiet enough to pass as normal preference.
21-30 checked: Soft Launching a Vibe
Light atmosphere. You enjoy a coherent mood and occasionally let people see it. The playlist, drink, or outfit detail appears right when the scene needs it.
31-40 checked: Curated but Plausible
Curated casual. Your self-presentation has visible structure, but it still feels low-stakes. The aesthetic is managed without announcing itself too loudly.
41-50 checked: Scene-Aware Regular
Scene-aware. You know the codes and use them intentionally. People can probably identify your taste lane before the second topic of conversation.
51-60 checked: Tastefully Performative
Soft performative. Preference and persona are now intertwined. The tote, playlist, cafe order, and reference choices are sincere, but they are also doing work.
61-70 checked: The Algorithm Knows
Highly legible. Your aesthetic is easy to read across objects, posts, habits, and media. The algorithm has enough evidence to predict your next era.
71-80 checked: Fully Art-Directed
Full character build. The signals line up almost too well. You are not just choosing objects; you are building a coherent atmosphere around daily life.
81-90 checked: Main Character, Documented
Main-character signaling. The persona is deliberate, consistent, and very shareable. Even the casual moments seem to arrive with lighting notes.
91-100 checked: Performance Art in Human Form
Performance art. The boundary between sincere taste and aesthetic theater has mostly disappeared. It is probably real, but it is also extremely well staged.
The eight signal areas
Style signals
Wearable clues such as totes, layers, glasses, and accessories.
Cafe rituals
The public routine around coffee, matcha, laptop work, and wellness props.
Media taste
Playlists, books, films, records, and the references you keep nearby.
Social curation
Captions, profile choices, photo order, timing, and selective mystery.
Cultural literacy
Art, theory, design, and niche language used to survive the room.
Objects
Candles, prints, zines, packaging, notebooks, and room evidence.
Offline scenes
Galleries, markets, readings, cafes, shows, and third-place behavior.
Self-awareness
The irony, defensiveness, and jokes that reveal you know the bit.
Performative Purity Test FAQ
What does a high score mean?
A high checked count means many aesthetic, taste, and social curation behaviors apply to you. A high purity-style score means fewer checked items.
Is performative bad?
Not necessarily. The quiz treats performance as playful self-presentation, not as a flaw or moral ranking.
How is the score calculated?
The page counts checked items and subtracts that number from 100 for the displayed purity score.
Does this diagnose my personality?
No. It is a light social quiz about public signals, not a personality diagnosis or serious assessment.
Can I share the result?
Yes, if you want to. The copied text shares the score and checked count without revealing every answer.
Keep the result playful
The checklist is for light self-reflection around taste and presentation. It should not be used to label someone else, judge sincerity, or replace direct conversation.
Updated June 23, 2026