Get Alex's Ultimate Dating Blueprint: www.playingfir... Alex's channel: / channel This video will teach how to get more matches on tinder and how to get more matches on dating apps AND (lol) how to take better pictures for online dating
Good to see the man Alex back in his element and where he's at his best; actually talking about online game, and without his annoying chat to the right of the video. I miss this side of him on his own channel. And props to Avery for talking about his weaknesses and the mistakes he used to make so we can learn. Most coaches (including legit ones) don't do that.
The video has to contain something genuinely new, not just a new take on something or a different spin, to compensate for a chat rolling visibly on the video. It's distracting, feels cheap productionwise, and imagine a good third point here for the sake of rythm.
I paid a professional 850 dollars and it got me better results than my 1 match. Then my mom took photos of me that got even better results. Sad and funny how that works.
photofeeler is bad because it makes you look too much like a nice guy rather than the player bad boy type. Examples have been done where it shows a shirtless model getting 5/10 as opposed to a normal dude with a smile getting 8/10. People will rate you higher if you look more nice guy material (having a smile etc.) rather than cool "player" type
That’s why they have different rating categories like smart, trustworthy, and attractive. Attractive is the most important one. But in reality, smiling does improve your attractiveness and dating prospects. If you look mean then women will be afraid of you. You want to look approachable.
@@JohnnyWalkerBlack142 untrue. People rate models who clearly are a 10/10 on attractiveness a 4/10 simply cause they are shirtless and look like a douche.
@@JohnnyWalkerBlack142 cbf finding it again. believe me if you want. But you can try it yourself. Upload a shirtless models photos. He will get low. I've tried it
Even if you're literally 7'2, I'd always add an inch or two on dating apps, because women will just assume guys lie and add that inch or two. So if you say 5'4, they'll think you're actually 5'2. If you say 5'5 or 5'6, they'll size you at the correct 5'4