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Updated June 29, 2026

The Relationship Simulator That Shows Your Breakup Before You Date

The Relationship Simulator That Shows Your Breakup Before You Date

The Idea

Dating apps show photos, bios, and shared interests.

This idea shows the future argument.

Two people enter values, goals, routines, money habits, communication style, family expectations, and lifestyle preferences. The simulator highlights where conflict is likely to appear later.

It is not romantic, but it could be useful.

What’s Blocking It?

Relationships are not spreadsheets.

People change. Timing matters. Stress, money, family, maturity, health, and effort can shift everything.

An AI can identify risk patterns, but it cannot reliably predict love. A bad version could make people overthink, judge too early, or avoid relationships that might have worked.

The Closest Real Version Today

The closest versions today are dating apps, compatibility quizzes, personality tests, relationship coaching, therapy apps, and AI chat tools.

These can surface preferences and communication styles, but they do not simulate a relationship with reliable accuracy.

Could This Become a Real Startup?

A practical version could work if it stays humble.

The product should not say “this relationship will fail.” It should show possible friction points and better questions to ask before getting serious.

That could help people make better decisions without pretending human relationships are fully predictable.

Timeline poll

When could this become real?

Pick your best estimate and compare it with the community.

1–2 years 17%
5 years 39%
10 years 39%
50 years 4%
100 years 0%
1000 years 0%
Impossible / never 0%
Community score

Impossible or inevitable?

8
Discussion

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