How ChadMe AI scores your face
Last updated: May 2026
ChadMe gives you a REAL AI face rating built around a simple idea: your selfie is analyzed as a set of visible traits, each mapped to a score (often 1–10) plus short explanations. The exact labels can vary by mode, but the flow is consistent: overall → traits → text breakdown.
What the model sees
The app works from your photo — lighting, angle, and image quality all matter. The model estimates things people can see in still images, such as:
- Structure — jawline, chin, cheekbones (as they appear in 2D).
- Eyes & brows — shape, spacing, intensity.
- Skin — clarity and texture cues in the photo.
- Symmetry & harmony — how balanced features look together.
It is not a medical scan and does not measure bone structure in real life — only what’s visible in the image you uploaded.
What 1–10 means in the app
Scores are relative estimates for that photo and session. They’re meant to be readable and comparable trait-to-trait — not a universal “rank” against everyone on Earth. If you want a fairer read, keep conditions similar between photos (same distance, lighting, no heavy filters).
Why scores differ between modes
Roast, ascend, physique, and other modes may use different prompts or models. Treat each run as its own snapshot. For interpreting lines on the screen, see how to read your breakdown.
Why front and side selfies help
A front selfie is best for symmetry, facial harmony, eyes, skin, and hair framing. A side selfie gives more signal for jawline, chin projection, neck posture, nose profile, and lower-third balance. When both angles are clear, the AI has less reason to guess from one flattering or unflattering picture.
Why your score can move
Two ratings can differ if the photo setup changes. Low light can flatten skin and eyes. A close camera can distort nose and face width. Looking down can weaken the jawline. A haircut or facial hair change can alter the frame around the face. That is why ChadMe works best when you treat ratings as repeatable tests instead of one permanent label.
How to use the score responsibly
Start with the written explanation, then choose one fixable trait to test. If the result mentions skin, improve lighting and skincare basics. If it mentions hair or frame, test grooming. If it mentions symmetry or harmony, retake with a neutral expression before making big conclusions. The best score is the one that gives you a next action.