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The First Personality Quiz That Changes Its Answer After You Close It

You answered the questions. Then you kept writing. Now Daylogue is updating the picture whether you asked it to or not.

Daylogue PressLOS ANGELES, CA, September 9, 2026 · 4 min read

LOS ANGELES, CA, September 9, 2026 / PRNewswire / Every personality quiz in history ends when you submit the last answer. Daylogue's starts there.

The quiz gives you a first impression of yourself — a portrait assembled from how you answer a set of questions on a given Tuesday afternoon. That portrait is real. It is also incomplete. What happens next is what makes Daylogue different from every other self-assessment on the market: it keeps reading.

Daylogue's pattern journal reads each check-in a user writes after completing the quiz and quietly revises the picture. A trait that looked dominant on day one might fade by week six. A pattern that wasn't visible in the questionnaire surfaces in the entries. The quiz is the door. The journal is what's on the other side of it.

"Every other quiz asks who you are today," said Brandon Bibbins, Founder and CEO of Daylogue. "Daylogue is the first one that admits that question has a different answer next month."

This is not a minor distinction. Every major personality framework — from broad typology systems to workplace assessments to the pop quizzes people share on their lunch breaks — treats the test as a closed event. You answer, you receive a result, you carry that result until something forces you to revisit it. Most people never revisit it.

Daylogue's approach treats the quiz as the first data point, not the last. A user who describes themselves as someone who "handles stress well" on day one will, after six weeks of check-ins, have generated an actual record of how they handled stress. That record might confirm the self-assessment. It might not. Either way, the picture is more accurate than the Tuesday-afternoon answer.

The feature is available now for Daylogue users on iOS and web. The quiz takes roughly five minutes. The revision never stops.

"Every other quiz asks who you are today. Daylogue is the first one that admits that question has a different answer next month." — Brandon Bibbins

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How does Daylogue's personality quiz work?

You answer a short set of questions when you first open Daylogue. The app uses those answers to build an initial portrait of how you tend to think, react, and relate. As you continue writing check-ins, Daylogue's pattern engine reads what you're actually writing and updates that portrait over time.

Q: What does it mean for the quiz to "keep revising"?

It means Daylogue treats your quiz answers as a starting point, not a conclusion. If your entries over six weeks show a consistent pattern that your initial answers didn't capture, the app reflects that. The portrait on screen is always based on your most recent actual behavior, not a one-time snapshot.

Q: Is this like MBTI or other personality typing systems?

No. Daylogue doesn't assign fixed types or labels. The goal is to show you patterns in your own behavior and thinking over time — not to categorize you into a box and leave you there. The quiz is an entry point, not a destination.

Q: Does Daylogue share my quiz results or patterns with anyone?

No. Your entries and patterns are private. Entries written inside the Daylogue app are end-to-end encrypted on your device before upload. The app cannot read your entries, and nothing in your profile is shared or sold.

Q: What if I don't want to take the quiz?

The quiz is optional. Daylogue works as a pattern journal with or without it. The quiz simply gives the pattern engine an earlier starting point.

About Daylogue

Daylogue is a pattern journal that reads your past entries and detects the emotional patterns running through them. Instead of a stack of separate journal entries, you get a short, plain-language summary that updates over time: what topics keep coming back, when a pattern is repeating, what's shifted in the last few weeks. Daylogue is not therapy and is not a replacement for professional care. It is a private space on your phone for honest reflection, a companion to therapy, to hard conversations, and to the days when you want to know yourself a little better. Entries written inside the Daylogue app are end-to-end encrypted on your device before upload, so Daylogue cannot read them. (SMS and email check-ins, and AI-generated summaries, are handled on the server and are not end-to-end encrypted. See Daylogue's privacy page for the full map.) Founded by Brandon Bibbins, Daylogue is independent and available on iOS and web at daylogue.io.

Media Contact

Daylogue hello@daylogue.io daylogue.io

SOURCE Daylogue

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