Question set guide
Rice Purity Test Questions
Rice Purity Test questions are a 100-item yes-or-no checklist about social experiences, romance, intimacy, parties, substances, rules, and other personal life events. This page explains what the question set covers and how the scoring works. To answer the full checklist and get a private score, use the classic test page.
Machine-Readable Summary
- Page type
- Definition and guide page for Rice Purity Test questions.
- Question count
- The classic format uses 100 yes-or-no questions.
- Score formula
- Rice Purity score = 100 - checked question count.
- Main boundary
- This page explains themes; the homepage owns the full interactive checklist.
What do Rice Purity Test questions cover?
The classic checklist mixes everyday social prompts with mature personal topics. The safest way to understand the questions is by theme: each item is a yes-or-no self-report prompt, and no single answer should be treated as a verdict about someone.
Social and campus experiences
Questions often ask about parties, dating-adjacent situations, school routines, and group experiences that many users recognize from college culture.
Romantic and relationship context
Some prompts refer to crushes, dating, affection, and relationship milestones. They are meant as broad self-report items, not relationship advice.
Intimacy and sensitive life events
The classic checklist includes mature and sensitive topics. Users should answer privately, skip anything uncomfortable, and avoid using the score to judge anyone.
Parties, substances, and risk-adjacent behavior
A portion of the list covers nightlife, alcohol or substance exposure, and rule-breaking contexts. The page treats these as informal checklist topics, not safety guidance.
Rules, discipline, and public situations
Some questions touch on getting in trouble, public embarrassment, or boundary-crossing events. These items are not legal, school, or workplace advice.
Privacy, sharing, and score context
The most useful way to handle the questions is to answer for yourself, read the score lightly, and share only when everyone involved is comfortable.
How the questions affect the score
How to read the question list responsibly
Use the full quiz when you want a score
This page explains the question set. The homepage owns the interactive 100-question checklist, score calculation, reset, and share text.
Answer only what you want to answer
The test is informal. If a prompt feels too personal or uncomfortable, skipping the quiz or leaving it private is a valid choice.
Do not treat the result as a label
A Rice Purity score is a simple count-based result. It is not a diagnosis, safety measure, character score, or maturity ranking.
Avoid comparing people harshly
Scores are easiest to misunderstand when they become social proof. Use the questions for self-reflection or voluntary group fun only.
Where to go next
Privacy and sensitive-topic notes
Some Rice Purity Test questions are personal. The site does not need a name, school, email, or social login to take the classic quiz. Read the Privacy Policy and Disclaimer if you want the site boundaries in one place.
FAQ about Rice Purity Test questions
How many Rice Purity Test questions are there?
The classic Rice Purity Test format uses 100 yes-or-no questions. The score starts at 100 and subtracts one point for each checked item.
Can I see the full Rice Purity Test questions here?
This page explains the question themes and boundaries. To see and answer the full 100-question checklist, use the classic Rice Purity Test on the homepage.
What topics do Rice Purity Test questions cover?
The questions cover social experiences, romance, intimacy, parties, substances, rule-breaking situations, and other personal life events. Some items are mature, so the test should stay private and optional.
Are Rice Purity Test questions official Rice University questions?
No. Rice Purity Test Guide is an independent entertainment site and does not claim official Rice University affiliation, endorsement, or administration.
Do all questions affect the score equally?
Yes. In the classic count-based model, each checked question subtracts one point. The simple formula is why the result is easy to read, but it also means the score should not be treated as a deep assessment.
Should I use the questions to compare friends?
Only if everyone is comfortable and treats it as light entertainment. Do not pressure anyone to answer sensitive questions or explain a score.
Ready to answer the actual questions?
Use this page to understand the question set, then take the full classic checklist privately. The result appears on the same page and can be reset when you want to retake it.