Map vs compatibility test
A compatibility test usually tries to score or judge a pair. A DayRoot Relationship Map is a one-time Me + someone report for one pair's chemistry, pacing, care points, friction, repair cues, and timing.
Search intent: Users deciding whether a Relationship Map is the right paid report for one connection.
Boundary: DayRoot is for reflection and entertainment. It is not medical, legal, financial, psychological, safety, or deterministic relationship advice.
A map is not a verdict
A compatibility test often gives a score or simple answer. DayRoot intentionally avoids that frame.
A Relationship Map reads one connection as a living pattern. It asks where attraction shows up, where pressure may gather, and what kind of repair or pacing may help.
One map, one pair
Each Relationship Map is for one Me + someone pair. It is not reusable across different people because the report depends on the two patterns being read together.
Plus members receive a member price for Relationship Maps. Plus does not make future maps unlimited or free.
When a map is useful
A map is useful when you want language for chemistry, care, friction, and timing without pretending the chart can make decisions for you.
It should support reflection and conversation. It should not replace safety planning, professional advice, direct communication, or personal judgment.
Related questions
Short answers.
What does a Relationship Map include?+
It covers chemistry, pacing, care points, friction, repair cues, and timing for one Me + someone pair.
Is it a score?+
No. DayRoot does not reduce the relationship to a compatibility score or fixed outcome.
What does it cost?+
A standard Relationship Map is $12.99. Plus members can buy each map for the $7.99 member price.
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