The Love Logic Lab: What’s Your Relationship IQ? May 29, 2026 Quizzes / Relationship Quiz 26 0 Share the Love Relationship Quiz 03 Psychology says we all have a “Primary Drive” in romance. Are you seeking a co-conspirator, a sanctuary, or a stage? Take the audit to uncover the hidden psychology of your dating style. 1. You’re on a first date and the conversation hits a "dead air" silence. Your reflex is to: A. Take the lead: Ask a structured question to get the "data" flowing again. B. Lean into the vibe: Use playful body language or a joke to soften the tension. C. Observe: Sit in the silence to see how they handle the pressure. It’s a test. D. Panic-pivot: Start talking about something random just to fill the space. E. Read the room: You choose your response based on their energy. 2. When you think about "The One," you’re primarily looking for someone who: A. Challenges you: A partner who matches your drive and ambition. B. Admires you: Someone who truly "gets" your aesthetic and your fun side. C. Grounds you: A calm port in the storm who doesn't need constant entertainment. D. Rescues you: Someone to handle the "adulting" so you can stay in your creative flow. E. All of the above: You need a partner who can pivot roles as fast as you do. 3. Your partner does something that mildly hurts your feelings. Your "Conflict IQ" move is: A. The Direct Approach: You lay it out clearly and neutrally. No drama, just facts. B. The Hint: You get a little quiet to see if they’re intuitive enough to notice. C. The Vault: You file it away. If it happens again, it’s a pattern; if not, you let it go. D. The Blow-up: You let the emotion out fully because you're a "feel it to heal it" type. E. The Pivot: You distract yourself with work or a project until the feeling fades. 4. How much of your "True Self" do you reveal in the first month? A. The Resume: "This is who I am and where I’m going; take it or leave it." B. The High-Light Reel: You show the best, most editorial version of yourself first. C. The Slow Burn: You’re an onion; they have to earn every layer of your trust. D. The Open Book: You’re vulnerable early on; you crave fast intimacy. E. The Chameleon: You share exactly as much as the other person is comfortable with. 5. In your opinion, the most "psychologically attractive" trait is: A. Competence: Seeing them be an absolute boss in their element. B. Charisma: The way they command a room without even trying. C. Consistency: Knowing exactly who they are going to be every single morning. D. Unpredictability: That "Plot Twist" energy that keeps you on your toes. E. Intuition: The ability to read your mood without you saying a word. 6. You’re at a party, and your partner is stuck in a boring conversation. You: A. The Extractor: You swoop in with a logical excuse to pull them away. B. The Socialite: You join the circle and turn the boring topic into something fun. C. The Observer: You stay across the room and see how they handle it on their own. D. The Empath: You feel their awkwardness so deeply, you have to leave the room. E. The Strategist: You send them a "get out of jail free" text to see if they’ll take the bait. 7. When you’re stressed, how do you want your partner to react? A. Solve it: Give me a plan or handle a task for me. B. Distract me: Take me out, make me laugh, or change my scenery. C. Leave me be: I need silence and space to process my own logic. D. Support me: I need physical presence and total emotional validation. E. Ask me: Don't assume, just ask what I need in the moment. 8. Your "Dating Dealbreaker" is usually: A. Laziness: If they don't have drive or systems, you lose respect fast. B. Blandness: If they have no personal style or "vibe," you get bored. C. Clinginess: If they demand too much of your "me time," you feel suffocated. D. Coldness: If they’re too clinical or detached, you feel lonely. E. Dishonesty: If the "math" of their stories doesn't add up, you’re out. 9. If your love life was an editorial spread, the caption would be: A. "Power Moves & Power Couples." B. "High Fashion, Higher Stakes." C. "The Art of the Quiet Life." D. "Chasing the Midnight Sun." E. "A Study in Sophisticated Nuance." 10. The best way to "win" an argument with you is to: A. Present a logical counter-argument that actually makes sense. B. Make a grand, romantic gesture that proves you care more than the fight. C. Give it time, you realize the logic of the other side once you’ve cooled off. D. Just apologize sincerely; you value the connection over being right. E. Acknowledge your perspective first, then pivot to a solution together. Ready to send