A Tuned result has four parts. Here is how to read each one — and more importantly, what to do with it.
1. Your frequency archetype
What kind of relational signal you transmit
2. The resonance score (0–100)
How aligned two frequency inputs are
3. The compatibility tier
The named range your score falls into
4. The Third Entity
The personality of the relationship itself
The resonance score is a number from 0 to 100. It tells you how closely two sets of inputs align across four components: birthday proximity (45%), signal pattern similarity (30%), energy style compatibility (15%), and a cross-component interaction term (10%).
The important thing to understand about the score is that it measures input alignment, not relationship quality. A high score means your inputs are similar. A low score means they differ significantly. Neither predicts whether the relationship is good.
Think of the score less as a grade and more as a tuning dial position. Two instruments tuned to the same pitch sound a certain way. Two instruments tuned far apart sound a different way. Both are valid musical choices. The question is not which is better — it is what you want to make with the combination you have.
The five tiers — Full Signal, Clear Channel, Partial Sync, Narrow Band, and Different Frequency — are descriptions of the gap between two inputs, not evaluations of the people involved.
Full Signal (83–100)
Rare. Your inputs are closely aligned on most dimensions. Communication tends to feel effortless. The risk is missing each other's growth edges — when everything is easy, you both have to make the decision to introduce friction.
Clear Channel (70–82)
Strong alignment with some variation. You have a clear line of communication with specific areas of difference that create productive tension. This is often the most functional tier for long-term relationships.
Partial Sync (50–69)
You share some frequencies and diverge on others. Connection happens more easily in certain contexts than others. This is the most common tier — and often where the most interesting dynamics emerge.
Narrow Band (30–49)
Significant differences in most input dimensions. Connection requires active effort and deliberate translation between styles. These relationships often require more patience — and offer more specific growth.
Different Frequency (0–29)
Wide divergence across inputs. Not a warning — a starting point. The most growth-oriented relationships often fall here. Understanding why you operate so differently is the whole project.
The Third Entity is the part of the result with the most to say. It is the named archetype of the relationship itself — not what you are, not what the other person is, but what the two of you create together.
Each Third Entity comes with three description sets based on your energy style compatibility: aligned, complementary, or different. These descriptions cover three things: what works in this dynamic, what creates friction, and one concrete thing to do this week.
The "what to do this week" section is the most useful part. It is not advice about who to be — it is a specific behavioral prompt designed to pass what we call the Tuesday Test: could you actually do this next Tuesday? If the answer is yes, try it. If it sounds too abstract to execute, treat it as a conversation starter rather than an action item.
After you read your result, the most productive question is not "is this accurate?" It is "does this create a useful lens for talking about something real?"
Results work best when you share them with the person you compared yourself to. Ask whether the Third Entity description feels recognizable. Notice what they agree with and what they push back on. The pushback is often where the most useful conversation happens — because it means you have found an assumption one of you was making that the other did not share.
Tuned is designed to start conversations, not end them. The result is a shared reference point, not a verdict.
If the result does not feel accurate, a few things might explain it.
First, the signal pattern choice (visual waveform) is intuitive — if you chose based on what looks coolest rather than what felt most like you, the result will skew. Try re-entering with a different choice and compare.
Second, Tuned describes your predominant relational pattern, not how you are in every situation. If you are reading the result through the lens of a specific relationship where you operate differently than usual, it may feel off. The archetype is about your default signal, not your range.
Third — and most importantly — Tuned is an entertainment tool built on behavioral observation, not a scientific instrument. Some results will feel very accurate. Some will feel partially accurate. Some will feel completely off. All three responses are valid and fine.
Ready to find your frequency?
Discover your archetype and check your compatibility.