So you’ve taken every “how to choose between 2 guys quiz” on the internet, clicked through the “Which one is your soulmate?” memes, and you’re still staring at two WhatsApp threads, two hearts, and one very tired brain. Girl, I get it. The quizzes are fun, but they never ask the questions that actually matter to you: Do his life goals line up with yours? Does he make you feel safe or just excited? And how do you even compare things that feel totally different—like the way Guy A kisses versus the way Guy B remembers your coffee order?
That’s where StaMatrix comes in. Instead of another 3-minute personality quiz that spits out “Pick the one with the better hair,” you build your own decision matrix: a living table that weighs every factor you care about—humor, sex vibe, money style, cat tolerance, whatever—so you can see, in black-and-white, which guy actually fits the life you want. Think of it as the anti-buzzfeed quiz: 100 % personalized, 0 % random.
Online quizzes are built for ad clicks, not your future happiness. They reduce complex humans to cartoon archetypes: “The Bad Boy,” “The Nice Guy,” “The Brooding Artist.” Real life is messier. Maybe Guy A is 70 % bad-boy, 30 % cuddly caretaker, and maybe Guy B’s “nice” is actually passive-aggressive when you look past the flowers. A five-question quiz can’t capture that nuance, but a matrix can. You list every trait that matters to you, assign it a weight from 1–10, score each guy honestly, and boom—your heart gets a spreadsheet.
Open StaMatrix, hit “Create new table,” and name it something petty like “Who Gets My Friday Nights.” Then list your parameters. Not sure where to start? The built-in AI assistant will literally ask, “What’s hard about choosing?” Type: “I’m torn between two guys—one is spontaneous but flaky, the other is stable but a bit boring.” The AI spits out a starter list:
You can delete, add, or rename anything. Want a row for “How he treats my little sister”? Add it. Want to weigh “Meme game” at 9/10 because laughter is your love language? Do it. This is your matrix.
Now rate each guy on every parameter. StaMatrix gives you a 1–10 slider; you can even add notes so you remember why you gave Spontaneous Guy a 3 on “Reliability” (cough, forgot your birthday, cough). The beauty is that the math doesn’t judge. If “Makes me feel calm” is weighted twice as high as “Makes me feel butterflies,” the matrix will quietly reward the calm guy—even if your group chat is team butterflies.
Let’s walk through a mini example:
| Parameter (weight 1–10) | Guy A: Marco | Guy B: Josh |
|---|---|---|
| Future kids vibe (10) | 7 | 9 |
| Spontaneity (8) | 9 | 4 |
| Reliability (9) | 4 | 9 |
| Sexual chemistry (7) | 8 | 6 |
| Family approval (6) | 5 | 8 |
Multiply score × weight, add it up, and Josh edges Marco 252 → 231. Your gut already knew Josh was “boring but safe”; now you have numbers that confirm why safe is winning. Maybe you’ll decide to up-weight “Sexual chemistry” until Marco catches up—or maybe you’ll accept that reliability matters more than sparks right now. Either way, the choice stops being abstract.
Emotions fluctuate. After a wild date you might bump Marco’s “Fun” score to 10; after he cancels again you might drop it to 2. StaMatrix keeps unlimited versions, so you can track how scores change over weeks, not minutes. Think of it as a diary that does math.
That happens—and it’s useful. A big gap between gut and grid usually means either:
Try this: hide the names. Replace “Marco” with “Guy A” and “Josh” with “Guy B.” Re-score blind. If the winner flips, you were biased by the label, not the behavior. StaMatrix lets you toggle anonymity in one click.
Copy-paste this starter into StaMatrix and tweak away:
AI will auto-fill descriptions like “Growth mindset: Does he read books, go to therapy, invest in skills?” so you don’t start from zero.
Quizzes are snacks; a matrix is the full meal. You deserve more than a meme telling you which guy “matches your energy.” You deserve clarity that still leaves room for romance. StaMatrix is free to start, takes three minutes to set up, and spoiler: once you see the totals, your next text practically writes itself.
So open a new tab, drop your problem into the AI assistant, and watch your love life turn into a tidy table. No cosmic signs required—just good old-fashioned weighted averages. May the best cells win.