Does Your Crush Like You Back?
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Free couple vibe quiz
Name the current mood of your relationship and choose the next move that fits tonight.
Answer eight quick couple questions and get a result that points to the current room: cozy reset, playful spark, or reflective check-in. The result is a mood read, not a permanent label.

Choose the answer that sounds like the repeated pattern, not the answer you wish were true.
Questions Overview
This free quiz uses 8 relationship scenarios. Choose the answer that matches the repeated pattern, not the answer that feels most hopeful in one moment.
Your result reads consistency, repair, emotional safety, direct communication, and the gap between chemistry and reliable love.
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Most relationship confusion does not need a verdict from a relationship coach who barely knows you. Caleb Merridan gives you private tools to slow down, see the pattern, and choose your next step yourself.

For people who want an easy way to learn each other's habits, preferences, and small emotional details before the relationship feels too serious.

For couples who need a lighter way to restart a call, check in after distance, or move past the same conversation loop.

For people in a crush, situationship, or early dating stage who want to notice patterns without spiraling over one message.
I started with relationship advice.
At first, I thought people needed sharper answers. Is this a red flag? Does he care? Should I stay patient, say something, pull back, or finally stop explaining?
But after seeing the same questions again and again, I started to notice something else.
Most people were not looking for someone to take over their love life. They were looking for a way to think clearly before they made the next move.
Formal counseling can be valuable, but a lot of people are not ready for it. It can feel too expensive, too serious, too exposed, or simply too far away from the small moments where confusion actually happens.
And many people do not want another stranger giving them a verdict.
They want privacy. They want language. They want a way to look at the pattern without being pushed into a performance of healing.
That is why Caleb Merridan became more than articles.
I wanted to build a place where relationship questions could become small, usable tools: a quiz that names the pattern, a game that helps two people compare answers, a guide that gives words to something hard to say.
Not consulting. Not a diagnosis. Not a dramatic answer.
Just a calmer way to understand what is happening, and one useful next step you can actually take.


Before Caleb Merridan became a library of quizzes and games, I was already sharing relationship ideas through short videos, carousel posts, and simple advice content.
The same topics kept coming back.
Mixed signals. Anxious waiting. Boring date nights. Friends who feel like more. Hard conversations that never start. The strange feeling of knowing something is off, but not knowing how to name it.
People saved those posts because they recognized themselves in them.
They shared them because someone else needed the words too.
Sometimes a short idea did more than explain a feeling. It gave someone a way to finally ask, "Is this happening to us?"
That response shaped the website.
Caleb Merridan is built from the questions people kept returning to. The ones that were too personal for a comment section, too small for therapy, but too important to ignore.
So the ideas became tools.
Quizzes to organize the pattern. Games to make the conversation easier to start. Guides to turn an unclear feeling into something you can say without making everything heavier.
People usually come here for one small question. They stay when the question turns into a clearer conversation.
"It helped us talk without making it a big thing."
We started with a game because it felt easy. Then one answer surprised us, and suddenly we were talking about something we had both been avoiding.
"I stopped replaying the same moment."
The quiz did not tell me what to do. It helped me see why I was reacting so strongly, and what pattern I was actually afraid of.
"It felt lighter than asking everyone for advice."
I liked that I could use it privately first. By the time I brought it up, I had better words and less panic.
Yes. You can answer every question and read your result without logging in.
No. It reads the current mood and next move, not long-term compatibility.
Yes. Answer together if you want a shared result, or take it separately and compare where the scores differ.
Yes. The result can change with energy, stress, and what your relationship needs this week.
This quiz reads the relationship mood in this moment. A cozy result means the next step should be easy and close. A playful result means novelty may help. A reflective result means clarity will probably create more connection than another distraction.
A couple's vibe changes with stress, energy, timing, and recent repair. Retake the quiz when the week changes rather than treating one result as your relationship identity.
Pick one next move from the result and make it specific enough to do: one date, one ritual, one question, or one repair conversation.
Quiz guide
A couple vibe quiz is most useful when it helps you choose the right next move for the room you are actually in. Some nights need softness, some need play, and some need a clearer conversation.
When ease and routine score highest, the relationship may not need a big production. A simple plan can feel romantic when both people treat it as chosen time rather than leftover time.
When novelty and laughter score highest, the relationship may need a small interruption to autopilot. A mini challenge, new dessert, walk, or game can shift the mood quickly.
When clarity scores highest, another distraction may not help. A short check-in can bring the relationship back into focus if it stays specific and kind.
Use the result as a tiny decision tool: pick the kind of connection the room can actually hold tonight.
Keep exploring
These sources help frame attachment, communication, emotional bids, and self-compassion. They support reflective relationship education; this quiz is not a clinical assessment.