What is a PSL-style face rating?
Last updated: April 2026
Online, people often talk about looks using detailed scales and blunt feedback — sometimes called a PSL-style way of rating faces. You don’t need to be in any forum to use ChadMe: the app gives you a similar free AI face rating with trait-by-trait scores and honest breakdowns.
What “PSL-style” usually means
In practice, “PSL-style” refers to:
- Numbered ratings — often 1–10 or similar scales, so you can compare traits side by side.
- Per-feature scores — jawline, eyes, skin, symmetry, and other traits called out separately.
- Direct language — feedback that skips generic compliments and focuses on what reads strongly or weakly in a photo.
ChadMe is an AI app, not a human forum. It uses models to estimate how features appear in your selfie and turns that into scores and text. Results are for entertainment and self-improvement motivation — not medical, legal, or professional advice.
Why people use apps like ChadMe
Most people want three things: a clear number, a breakdown they can act on, and a way to track progress over time. A free PSL-style rating in the app hits that first pass quickly; deeper modes (roast, ascend, physique, etc.) layer on top if you want more.
How to use the score responsibly
One photo, one lighting setup, one day — scores can move. Use the rating as a snapshot, not a verdict on your worth. If something feels off, try another photo (see our selfie tips) before drawing conclusions.