GUIDE

Free Kink Test, No Signup, No Email

Most online kink tests want your email. Some want a full account. Some say the test is free but quietly upsell you on premium results, deeper analysis, partner reports, or coaching. Most of them store your answers indefinitely and reserve the right to use them however they want.

We didn't want to build that. So we didn't.

Kinda Into That is free. There's no signup. There's no email field. There's no payment screen. The privacy architecture is designed so that even we, the people running the platform, cannot link individual answers back to you.

This is a guide to how that actually works and why it matters.

What "anonymous" actually means online

When someone says a service is "anonymous," they usually mean one of three different things, and these things vary wildly in how much privacy they actually offer.

Anonymous-ish. No name field, but you log in with email or Google, and they have your IP address, browser fingerprint, and an internal ID that links everything you do. Most "anonymous" quizzes are this.

Pseudonymous. You have a username or code, but the system can connect that pseudonym to other identifying information if it wanted to. Reddit is pseudonymous. So is most of FetLife.

Architecturally anonymous. The system is built so that even the operators of the system cannot connect your activity to you, even if they tried. This is rare because it requires deliberate engineering.

Kinda Into That is closer to the third category than most platforms in the space. We don't ask for an email, a name, a phone number, or any other identifier. The only thing tied to your answers is a four-character code that gets generated on your device when you start.

How your data actually flows

Here's what happens when you take the quiz, in order:

  1. You land on the site. We don't fingerprint your browser, set tracking cookies, or load third-party analytics that follow you around the web.
  2. You start the quiz. A four-character Vibe Code gets generated on your device. The first answer you submit creates a row in our database with that code.
  3. You answer questions. Each answer goes to the database, attached to your code.
  4. When you finish (or stop early), the system computes your tag scores and color identity from your answers.
  5. You get your results page, which you can return to by entering your code.
  6. You can share your code with a partner so they can take the quiz and compare with you.

That's it. That's the entire flow. There's no email confirmation. There's no profile setup. There's no "we'll send you a copy of your results."

What we don't have

We don't have your email address. We never asked.

We don't have your name. We never asked for that either.

We don't have your IP address attached to your code. The IP address might briefly appear in server logs (this is a basic property of how the internet works), but it's not stored alongside your answers in our database, and our application code never connects them.

We don't have a way to email you. If you forget your code and clear your device, your data is essentially gone — we can't recover it for you because there's no identifier we'd recover it by.

We don't have your face, voice, location, or any other biometric or location data.

What we do have

We have your answers, attached to your code. That's it.

For the aggregate features (showing community-level trends), we use only counts — never the underlying answers. We never publish what any individual code answered to any individual question.

If you've voluntarily turned on the "live trends" feature, your answers contribute to the global counts that other users can see. But what's published is "X% of users who answered this question said yes" — never which users, never your code.

What happens if you reset

You can reset your code from your original device at any time. When you reset, the row in our database is deleted. The code becomes inert. Anyone who tries to compare against your code after that gets "code not found."

The reset requires the same device you took the quiz on, because the device holds a small ID that proves ownership. This means someone with just your code can't delete your profile.

Why we did this

The adult tech space has a track record. OnlyFans had data scraped and dumped. Ashley Madison had its entire user database leaked. FetLife has had multiple breaches. Smaller platforms have quietly sold user data for years.

Sexual preferences are sensitive data. They can affect employment. They can affect family relationships. They can affect insurance, custody decisions, and immigration. People in jurisdictions where their preferences are criminalized can be physically endangered by data leaks.

We didn't want to be another platform that took on this responsibility and then dropped it. So we designed the system from the start so that the responsibility doesn't exist. There's nothing for us to leak about you because we don't have it.

When we'd ask for an email

We don't, currently. If we ever offer an optional feature that requires an email (we've thought about a "claim your code" feature for users who want their results to persist across devices), it'll be opt-in, paid, and clearly separate from the free quiz. Free, anonymous, no-email quiz access will stay the default forever.

Take it now

Kinda Into That is free at kindaintothat.com. No signup, no email, no friction. Just the quiz, your code, and your results. Take as long as you want. Stop whenever. Come back later if you want.

Or don't come back. That's also fine. The quiz doesn't need anything from you to keep existing.

Try it for yourself

No account. No email. Just the quiz, your code, and your results.