Taking the Rice Purity Test as a Couple: A Consent-First Guide
How adult partners can take the test separately, protect locally saved answers, and compare only what both people choose to share.
Adult partners can choose to use the Rice Purity Test as a conversation prompt, but a respectful approach starts with privacy and consent rather than score comparison.
Agree on boundaries before opening the test
- Decide whether either person wants to share a score at all.
- Do not assume sharing a total includes permission to discuss individual answers.
- Let either person skip a question or stop without explanation.
- Do not use the result to test honesty or compatibility.
Use separate devices when possible
The quiz saves checked question IDs in the current browser's local storage. Separate devices or browser profiles keep each person's saved checks separate.
Clear a shared device between turns
- The first person finishes and records only what they choose to keep.
- Use the delete control to remove saved progress.
- Reopen the test and verify that no boxes are checked.
- Only then hand the device to the second person.
What different totals establish
A difference establishes only that the totals are different. It does not reveal which questions produced them or support conclusions about personality, commitment, health, or relationship quality.
Share the minimum
The browser can create a result card containing the final score without selected questions. Sharing remains optional, and a person can keep both the total and individual answers private.
Read the complete consent-first couples guide and the privacy methodology.
Use the checklist privately
Calculate the total in your browser, then treat it as a count rather than a ranking or judgment.
Take the Test