Valorant Rice Purity Test — All 100 Questions, Score Meanings, and How It Works (2026)

The Valorant Rice Purity Test (VPS) is a community-made adaptation of the original Rice Purity Test — same yes-or-no format, same 0-100 scale, same social comparison purpose — applied entirely to your in-game behavior, habits, and experiences as a Valorant player.

Instead of asking about romantic history or substance use, the Valorant Purity Test asks about things like whether you have ever instalocked, sent a death threat, smurfed, fallen for a fake Yoru clone, or done something we will leave to question 47.

This guide covers the full 100-question list, what each section tests, how to interpret your VPS score, and how the Valorant version compares to the original Rice Purity Test.

The official Valorant Purity Test is available at valorantricepuritytest.org — created by @JDawesome23 on TikTok and Twitter. The original site (valorantricepuritytest.com) went viral in 2024 then went offline; the JDawesome23 rebuild is the current active version.

What Is the Valorant Rice Purity Test?

The Valorant Purity Test was originally created by a Reddit user (u/DahliaxYu) who shared it in the r/VALORANT subreddit, framing it as a way to find out how far you have gotten in your ‘Valorant career.’ That version went viral on Twitter and TikTok. When the original domain went offline, creator JDawesome23 rebuilt it at valorantricepuritytest.org with 100 questions — the full list is documented below.

The test works identically to the Rice Purity Test: tick every box that applies to your Valorant experience. Each checked box lowers your score by one point. A higher score means fewer things checked — a more ‘pure’ or casual Valorant player. A lower score means more boxes checked — a more experienced, obsessed, or chaotic player.

Unlike the original Rice Purity Test, which carries cultural weight from 100 years of use, the Valorant Purity Test is entirely for humor and community bonding. Its disclaimer matches the original’s: this is not a to-do list. Completion of all items would, per JDawesome23, result in needing years of therapy.

 Rice Purity TestValorant Purity Test
Questions100 yes/no100 yes/no
FormatCheckbox checklistCheckbox checklist
Scale0 to 1000 to 100
Lower score meansMore life experienceMore extreme Valorant behavior
Higher score meansFewer experiencesCasual/newer player
OriginRice University, 1924Community-made, 2024
Official?Yes (Rice Thresher)No — fan-created
MeasuresLife experiencesIn-game behavior & habits

All 100 Valorant Purity Test Questions — Full List

The following is the complete question list from valorantricepuritytest.org (JDawesome23 version), organized by category for easier reading. The test presents them as a single numbered list.

🎮  Basic Gameplay & Onboarding  (Q1-16)
Q#QuestionWhat It Tests
1Played Valorant?Entry point — almost everyone checks this. Scoring starts here.
2Got the Valorant Beta key?OG status — only day-one players from 2020 can check this.
3Played 5 Duelists in Competitive?Agent variety vs. one-trick habits — Duelists are the most played class.
4Instalocked?Selecting an agent instantly without checking team comp — very common.
5Bought a skin?Any cosmetic purchase — majority of active players have done this.
6Bought a battle pass?Seasonal content investment — common among regular players.
7Maxed out an Agent’s progression?Completed all unlock tiers for one agent — time investment marker.
8Received a Riot gun buddy?Official Riot-given buddy — events or tournament attendance required.
9Received an I Create Buddy?Creator program buddy — extremely rare, specific to content creators.
10Hit Ascendant or higher?Top ~11% of ranked players — significant skill achievement.
11Hit Immortal or higher?Top ~3% — serious competitive achievement.
12Hit Radiant?Top 500 in each region — elite level, very few can check this.
13Stuck in a rank for more than 6 months?Rank plateau — extremely common, even for dedicated players.
14Stuck in a rank for more than a year?Extended plateau — checked by many long-term players who hit ceiling.
15Check if that rank was Gold or PlatinumThe classic ‘hardstuck Gold’ experience — a Valorant meme in itself.
16Over Level 400?Account level — reflects hundreds of hours played since season start.
💸  Spending & Investment  (Q17)
Q#QuestionWhat It Tests
17Spent over $1,000 on skins?High-spending threshold — premium bundles ($100+) make this reachable for dedicated spenders.
💢  Toxic Behavior & Conduct  (Q18-33)
Q#QuestionWhat It Tests
18Disrespected a knife 1v1?Shooting rather than knifing in an agreed 1v1 — peak unsportsmanlike behavior.
19Played every single day for a month?Daily commitment — common among dedicated/addicted players.
20Played for more than 6 hours straight?Marathon session — checked by many competitive players during ranked grinds.
21Rage quitted a game?Leaving mid-match — extremely common, even with abandonment penalties.
22Screamed at your monitor while playing?Physical rage expression — nearly universal among competitive FPS players.
23Sent a toxic message to a teammate?In-game text toxicity — sadly common in ranked play.
24Yelled at or flamed a teammate in voice chat?Voice chat toxicity — widespread in competitive modes.
25Been muted by your teammates?Consequence of toxicity — very common.
26Been chat or comm banned?Official penalty — requires repeated reports.
27Lost a friendship due to Valorant?Real-life impact of in-game conflict — surprisingly common.
28Met someone you’d consider a legitimate threat to society?Encountering genuinely alarming behavior online — a dark Valorant milestone.
29Broken anything out of rage from Valorant?Physical rage damage — less common but memorable.
30Publicly shamed someone for their gameplay?Calling out teammates publicly — post-game lobbies or social media.
31Added someone after a game to flame them?Following a player to continue conflict — checked by many dedicated flamers.
32Sent or received a death threat over a game?Extreme toxicity — unfortunately not rare in high-stakes ranked.
33Joined a party after a game solely to argue?Seeking out conflict post-match — a specific and recognizable behavior.
😵  Addiction & Real-Life Impact  (Q34-42)
Q#QuestionWhat It Tests
34Neglected personal hygiene to play Valorant?Skipping showers for ranked sessions — the gamer stereotype made real.
35Skipped school or work to play Valorant?Real-life consequences of gaming addiction — checked by many.
36Missed a major life event to play Valorant?The ultimate addiction marker — wedding, funeral, etc. skipped for ranked.
37Played while drunk?Inebriated ranked sessions — common and usually disastrous.
38Played while high?Substance use + Valorant — a distinct subset of the player base.
39Played while on drugs harder than marijuana?Harder substance use during gaming — rare but documenting the full spectrum.
40Let Valorant negatively affect your mental health?Gaming-induced stress, anxiety, or depression — widely reported.
41Queued ranked to relieve stress, only to get more stressed?The classic stress loop — arguably checked by every ranked player ever.
42Got into physical conflict because of Valorant?Real-world violence triggered by gaming — rare but the test goes there.
😳  Community & The Weird Stuff  (Q43-55)
Q#QuestionWhat It Tests
43Flirted with someone in game?In-game romantic overtures — common in squads and voice chat.
44Had a sexual fantasy about a Valorant character?Parasocial attachment to game characters — the test goes there.
45Created or seen inappropriate fan art?Rule 34 territory — extremely widespread in gaming communities.
46Gone on Reddit or Twitter solely to view said fan art?Active seeking of inappropriate content — a step further than Q45.
47Ever…you know… to a Valorant character?The question that broke many streamers on camera. You know what it means.
48Done that more than 10 times?The follow-up to Q47. The escalation makes this the most meme-able sequence.
49Repeeked an op your teammate died to, only to also die?A specific tactical mistake everyone makes — checked universally.
50Believed PROD was NA’s last hope?PROD Braxton reference — a meme within the NA Valorant competitive scene.
51Know who the humble king is?Community-specific knowledge — refers to a streamer/content creator persona.
52Queued Swiftplay to find love?Using casual modes for social/romantic connections — a specific behavior.
53Sent explicit pictures to someone you met on Valorant?The test gets personal — online relationships that escalated.
54Received explicit pictures from someone you met on Valorant?Receiving end of Q53 — both are tracked separately.
55Strongly considered dating someone you met on Valorant?Valorant ‘e-dating’ territory — considered a staple of the community.
🤝  Culture, Identity & Cheating  (Q56-80)
Q#QuestionWhat It Tests
56Cosplayed as a Valorant character?Community engagement at convention or event level.
57Got told you have a Valorant accent?The regional accent stereotype in Valorant — a community meme.
58Thrown a game on purpose?Intentional throwing — against terms of service but widely done.
59Smurfed?Playing on a lower-ranked account to stomp — a widespread practice.
60Got boosted by a smurf?Having someone carry you on a higher-ranked account — common.
61Seen an e-couple?Witnessed an online couple in-game — almost universal at this point.
62Made fun of edaters knowing you’d do the same?Self-aware hypocrisy about in-game romance — a very honest question.
63Seen an ‘i miss her’?The post-loss sad gamer message — anyone who has been in voice chat has seen this.
64Cheated in Valorant?Used hacks or exploits — against ToS, but the test documents this.
65Placed a bet on a pro match?Esports gambling — a significant portion of the community engages.
66Collaborated to rig matches?Match-fixing — extreme, but the test covers the full spectrum.
67Gotten on a friend’s account to boost them?Account sharing — against ToS but commonly done between friends.
68Had someone boost your account?Receiving account boosting — common at ranks where players feel stuck.
69Bought an alt account?Secondary account purchase — extremely common for smurfing.
70Sold an account?Account selling — against ToS but a real practice.
71Gifted a skin to someone?In-game gifting — requires VP spend on behalf of another player.
72Were you romantically attracted to that person?Follow-up to Q71 — the skin gift as romantic gesture. Classic.
73Faked your gender in a game?Gender misrepresentation in lobbies — a documented behavior in FPS games.
74Faked your voice to sound different?Voice modulation for gender presentation or anonymity.
75Been sexually attracted to someone’s voice?Voice-based attraction — ‘voice carry’ is a real phenomenon.
76Lied about your rank or achievements?Rank inflation in self-presentation — very common socially.
77Used tracker.gg to spy on someone?Checking another player’s stats profile — almost universally done.
78Stream sniped someone?Watching a streamer’s broadcast to gain intel — against ToS.
79Consistently abuse Odin, Judge, or Operator?Heavy weapons/Operator abuse — the source of endless complaints.
80Used those weapons solely to tilt the enemy?Intentional psychological warfare via weapon choice.
🎮  Late-Game & IRL Crossover  (Q81-100)
Q#QuestionWhat It Tests
81T-bagged a player?Crouching repeatedly over a body — universal gaming disrespect. Almost everyone.
82Shot someone’s body after killing them?Post-death violence — a common expression of in-game frustration or celebration.
83Thought about Brimstone ulting a crowded area IRL?Game-to-real-life bleed — imagining using game abilities in real life.
84Barked or meowed at Sage/Skye for a heal?Making animal sounds to beg for healing — a beloved community meme.
85Acted annoying in agent select to get someone to dodge?Psychological dodge manipulation — strategic use of social dynamics.
86Actually edated someone you met on Valorant?Fully committed to an in-game relationship — the culmination of Q52/55.
87Been banned from a Valorant forum or Discord?Community moderation action — checked by those with strong opinions.
88Joined a Discord to shit-talk someone?Seeking out venues specifically for conflict.
89Watched motivational speeches before queuing?Ritual preparation for ranked — a surprisingly common behavior.
90Listened to glaive, Keshi, or Joji while playing?The ‘sad gamer’ playlist — a cultural touchstone for a specific type of Valorant player.
91Thought ‘these guys are pro?’ after a pro died badly?The universal pro-player criticism from someone who loses to Silver players.
92Fell for a fake Yoru clone?Getting fooled by Yoru’s decoy ability — a very specific and humbling experience.
93Turned from a flash IRL?Real-world game reflex — turning away from a bright light like it’s a flashbang.
94Turned from a bird IRL thinking it was a Skye flash?The Skye flash bird reflex in real life — a very specific Pavlovian response.
95Tried to jump or jiggle peek a corner IRL?Taking tactical movement habits into real life — the ultimate skill transfer.
96Know where the Subroza angle is?Pro player map knowledge reference — Subroza is a known pro/streamer.
97Got tilted only after losing pistol?Pistol round psychology — losing early rounds hits disproportionately hard.
98Copied a pro’s crosshair or settings?Settings mimicry for performance improvement — checked by most competitive players.
99Felt hyped after a pro match, then bottom fragged?The inspiration-to-humiliation pipeline — extremely relatable.
100Pi’ed in a ranked game?Community slang for a specific disruptive behavior. The test ends on a note only the community will fully understand.

What Your VPS Score Means

Your Valorant Purity Score (VPS) is calculated the same way as the Rice Purity Test: start at 100, subtract one point for every box checked. The interpretation is inverted from what most people intuitively expect:

Score RangeLabelWhat It Says About Your Valorant Career
90-100Pure CasualNew or very casual player. You have played Valorant but barely touched the competitive or cultural side of the game.
75-89Regular PlayerActive player with standard competitive experience. You have hit some milestones, dealt with ranked frustration, and checked the usual boxes.
55-74Dedicated PlayerSerious competitive player. Rank grinding, significant time investment, encountered the full range of community behavior.
35-54Chronically Online GamerDeep in Valorant culture. You know the memes, have had real-life impact from the game, and may have crossed some lines.
15-34UnhingedAccording to JDawesome23: you are far down the rabbit hole. Significant toxicity history, account violations, and a very complicated relationship with the game.
0-14Seek HelpThe test’s disclaimer about needing years of therapy applies most directly here. Completing all items on the test is not a goal.

A Dot Esports writer scored 31 and received the message: ‘It’s over for you, man. I’m sorry.’ That is the kind of result messaging the test delivers for lower scores.

How the Valorant Purity Test Compares to the Original

The format is identical. The purpose is similar — social bonding, comparison, humor. But there are three key differences:

1. No moral weight. The original Rice Purity Test carries a century of cultural context around the concept of ‘purity’ and life experience. The Valorant Purity Test has no such baggage — checking every box just means you have been very deep in a video game.

2. Lower = more experienced (inverted social meaning). On the original RPT, social attitudes about low scores vary — some communities treat it as a badge, others as concerning. On the VPS, a low score is purely a badge of honor (or at least humor) — it means you have been through the full Valorant experience.

3. Community-specific knowledge required. Many VPS questions (Q50 PROD reference, Q51 humble king, Q96 Subroza angle, Q84 barking for heals) are only meaningful if you are embedded in the Valorant community. The test doubles as a community knowledge quiz.

If you want to take the original 100-question Rice Purity Test: It is here — same format, same scale, but measuring life experiences rather than Valorant ones.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Valorant Rice Purity Test?

The Valorant Rice Purity Test is a community-made, fan-created quiz that adapts the format of the original Rice Purity Test specifically for Valorant players. It has 100 yes-or-no questions about in-game behavior, gaming habits, community culture, and the wild things that happen in competitive play. Your score (0-100) is called a VPS — Valorant Purity Score. Lower score means more Valorant chaos in your history.

Where can I take the Valorant Purity Test?

The current active version is at valorantricepuritytest.org — created by @JDawesome23 on TikTok and Twitter. The original site (valorantricepuritytest.com) went viral in 2024 and then went offline. The JDawesome23 rebuild uses the same 100-question format and is the version most currently being shared across the community.

What is a good Valorant Purity Test score?

Unlike the original Rice Purity Test, there is no conventional judgment about what is ‘good.’ A high score (80+) means you are a fairly casual or newer player. A low score (below 40) means you have been through the full unhinged Valorant experience — which in the gaming community is often worn as a badge of honor. The test is entirely for entertainment.

Is the Valorant Purity Test official?

No. The Valorant Purity Test is not affiliated with Riot Games in any way. It is entirely fan-created and community-maintained. Riot has not endorsed, approved, or acknowledged it officially. The test creator JDawesome23 built it as a community joke, not an official product.

How is the Valorant Purity Test different from the Rice Purity Test?

Both use the same yes-or-no, 0-100 format. The key differences: the Valorant test measures in-game behavior and gaming habits rather than life experiences; it has no moral or cultural weight around ‘purity’; lower scores are generally viewed positively in the gaming community (more experience); and many questions require specific Valorant community knowledge to understand. The original Rice Purity Test has been around since 1924. The Valorant version emerged in 2024.

Take the Original Next

The Valorant Purity Test borrows its format directly from the Rice Purity Test. If you have never taken the original — 100 questions about life experiences from romance to substances to digital behavior — it is worth trying for comparison.

Other tests like the Rice Purity Test — AO3, Innocence Test, gaming variants.

What does your Rice Purity Test score mean?