Tester guide

Start here.
Then take a PILL.

PILL has two test paths right now. One is the fast consumer experience: get one PILL based on how you feel. The other is the fuller alpha prototype: assessment, portrait, prescriptions, science, and feedback.

Both are useful. They just answer different questions. Very normal. Slightly startup-y. We persist.

Recommended tester path

Quick first. Full demo second.

First, see whether the core promise lands without explanation. Then take the full tour and tell us where the product earns trust or asks your brain to do unpaid labor.

01LandRead the public page, or use this tester guide.
02Get one PILLAnswer a few questions and receive one prescription.
03ReflectSay whether it helped, saved, missed, or felt wrong.
04Tour the demoTry the full alpha experience and portrait.
05Leave feedbackTell us what landed, confused you, or felt worth paying for.
Path A · 2 minutes

Quick consumer test

This is the main consumer traction test. It checks whether someone can understand the product and get value without reading a full explainer first.

  • Choose current mood
  • Choose what would help next
  • Choose energy level and preferred type
  • Receive one Daily PILL card
  • Reflect and optionally join the alpha
Path B · 5–8 minutes

Full alpha demo

This is the deeper product test. It shows the assessment, PERMAGAMI portrait, taste setup, check-in, prescription types, science layer, week view, and Thriving Index.

  • Move through the prototype using the arrows
  • Adjust sliders to see the Portrait change
  • Try media, practice, and connection prescriptions
  • Notice where the science earns trust
  • Finish with the reflection and feedback form
What we’re testing

Not “is this perfect?”
Is this worth coming back to?

The first alpha is about behavior: whether people understand the promise, receive a PILL that feels relevant, complete or save it, and want the daily version.

Does it feel personal?

Did the PILL feel matched to your state, or like a generic wellness card wearing a nice outfit?

Does it feel doable?

Was the action small enough to actually try on a real day with real brain soup?

Would you return?

Would you use this daily, a few times a week, or only when life starts doing improv?