Why red flags are hard to see from inside
Everyone can list red flags in a friend's relationship. Inside your own, the light is worse: affection is mixed in, history explains things away, and the frog-in-warm-water effect does the rest. That is why this game deliberately includes flags in disguise, red ones dressed as devotion and green ones that anxious eyes read as threats.
The distinction that matters most: a red flag is a pattern, not a moment. One defensive evening is a Tuesday. A rule that you are never allowed to be upset is a pattern. The cards in this game are all patterns, which is what makes them callable.
The flags people misread most
- Control as care: constant checking in, location sharing you did not choose, jealousy framed as proof of love.
- Intensity as intimacy: racing commitment, soulmate talk in week three, the future planned before you are known.
- Space as rejection: a partner who self-soothes with a named return time is doing it right, not pulling away.
- Gifts as repair: if the argument never resurfaces but nothing changed, it was bought, not resolved.
Your result names your blind side: whether you tend to excuse red flags or mistrust green ones. Both have histories, and both are workable. If your score leaned rosy and something in your own relationship kept coming to mind, the AI relationship coach is a private place to say it out loud. The toxic relationship quiz looks at your own patterns directly.