I noticed this site recently (it's been around for years). I know there's a ban on talking about SA but this site is decidedly different. I know there are lot's of wannabe SBs on the site but the fundamental model is to provide an incentive to a woman to give guy a chance (first date, no sex). At first, this seems kind of ridiculous and pathetic for the man paying to simply go on a no-sex date with a younger, better looking girl. Normally, this girl would only be dating Chads and would swipe right (no) 100% of the time. The interesting thing and the reason I'm asking the Terb community is that apparently, woman suck at choosing men. They have very unrealistic expectations and tend to have problems getting into meaningful relationships. The Chads of the world will date them and fuck them silly, but these same Chads won't stick around because they have many other chicks to fuck. Look at the following excerpt from an Atlantic article:
Link to article
Anyways, thought this was an interesting take on a fairly well known subject. Interest in thoughts/experiences from others. I realize this post is more for single guys, but for married guys, good chance your status may change anyways. Take it from me, it can happen to anyone
Link to article
Obviously, 80% of the woman cannot reject 80% of men. But it does explain the current dating scene. Basically, 80% of woman are chasing after the 20% of men who are Chads or close to. Only the Chads are happy. So enter something like "What's your price". You can get a girls attention for one night who most likely would never give you a first chance. And it's very possible you could charm her into actually liking and fucking you (assuming you aren't inviting a 10 to dinner when you are a 5). As long as you don't overreach, it's possible you could end up getting far higher quality woman than traditional dating. Now the one thing this ignores is that many woman are hesitant to use a service such as what's your price for various reasons. Therefore, the girls that actually use the site may tend to be more money oriented and less open to an actual relationship developing. However, most people would agree that chemistry is not something that can be forced or prevented - it simply happens in the right circumstances with the correct combination of two people. Therefore, no matter how resistant to relationships she might think she is, she is still very much vulnerable to chemistry developing.The design and marketing of dating apps further encourage a cold, odds-based approach to love. While they have surely created, at this point, thousands if not millions of successful relationships, they have also aggravated, for some men, their feeling that they are unjustly invisible to women.
Men outnumber women dramatically on dating apps; this is a fact. A 2016 literature review also found that men are more active users of these apps—both in the amount of time they spend on them and the number of interactions they attempt. Their experience of not getting as many matches or messages, the numbers say, is real.
But data sets made available by the apps can themselves be wielded in unsettling ways by people who believe the numbers are working against them. A since-deleted 2017 blog post on the dating app Hinge’s official website explained an experiment conducted by a Hinge engineer, Aviv Goldgeier. Using the Gini coefficient, a common measure of income inequality within a country, and counting “likes” as income, Goldgeier determined that men had a much higher (that is, worse) Gini coefficient than women. With these results, Goldgeier compared the “female dating economy” to Western Europe and the “male dating economy” to South Africa. This is, obviously, an absurd thing to publish on a company blog, but not just because its analysis is so plainly accusatory and weakly reasoned. It’s also a bald-faced admission that the author—and possibly the company he speaks for—is thinking about people as sets of numbers.
In a since-deleted 2009 official blog post, an OkCupid employee’s data analysis showed women rating men as “worse-looking than medium” 80 percent of the time, and concluded, “Females of OkCupid, we site founders say to you: ouch! Paradoxically, it seems it’s women, not men, who have unrealistic standards for the opposite sex.” This post, more than a decade later, is referenced in men’s-rights or men’s-interest subreddits as “infamous” and “we all know it.”
Anyways, thought this was an interesting take on a fairly well known subject. Interest in thoughts/experiences from others. I realize this post is more for single guys, but for married guys, good chance your status may change anyways. Take it from me, it can happen to anyone