The game throws you a series of short, real-life scenarios. You pick how you’d actually react, not how you wish you would. Some choices are obviously good, others are petty or straight-up mean. The trick is that the questions are designed to catch you off guard. One moment you’re deciding whether to hold the elevator for someone, the next you’re choosing between telling a white lie or brutal honesty. There’s no right or wrong here—just a percentage at the end that tells you where you land on the angel-to-devil scale.
It’s not deep psychology, but it doesn’t try to be. The charm is in how specific the questions get. You’ll laugh at yourself when you realize you’d actually take the last cookie from the break room without asking. The graphics are simple—cartoonish angel and devil icons that pop up with each answer. No flashy animations, no ads interrupting every two seconds. It’s just you, your conscience, and a few dozen questions that take maybe five minutes to finish.
The best part? You can share your result with friends. That’s where the fun really starts. Watching someone argue that they’re “mostly angel” while their result says 60% devil is pure entertainment. The app keeps a history of your past results too, so you can see if you’ve gotten worse over time. (Spoiler: most people don’t get more angelic.)
If you’ve got ten minutes to kill and want a laugh at your own moral flexibility, this is it. Don’t take the result too seriously—but don’t be surprised if you start second-guessing your next good deed.