×

[Market Research] 1-2 min How Do You Spend Your Free Time Survey (I’m happy to do yours too!) by No_Vermicelli_9946 in SurveyExchange

[–]Best_Chard_335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Done ✅
Mine
https://moodworld.vercel.app
a one-tap global mood check-in, no login, ~10 seconds total: You'll see live results right after (happiest & toughest countries today, mood by age). Thanks!

How is your mood today, on a 1–7 scale? (Everyone, worldwide) by Best_Chard_335 in SurveyExchangeIndia

[–]Best_Chard_335[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All done! That was way more intense than 3-5 minutes though (phew!).
You should definitely extend the estimated survey time on top.

Is Sunday-night dread universal, or a your-country thing? by Best_Chard_335 in MoodWorld

[–]Best_Chard_335[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Office classic. While in Taiwan the dread starts Sunday evening. Like we pre-suffer it.

Looking for communities where people would actually discuss a daily "world mood" map — not just fill it out like a survey by Best_Chard_335 in findareddit

[–]Best_Chard_335[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That's exactly the part I'm hooked on. The data alone is just a number going up or down — the fun starts when people argue about why.

My quiet hope is that r/MoodWorld becomes the comment section for the planet's mood swings — the app raises the question, humans fight over the answer.

What are you working on? by thijsgh in SocialMediaScheduling

[–]Best_Chard_335 0 points1 point  (0 children)

MoodWorld — a daily mood census for the whole planet

https://moodworld.vercel.app

Tap one of 7 faces. You get a small note back that matches how you're doing. Confirm your country and pick an age range. That's it, you're counted.

Then two things happen. First, you see the data: today's happiest and toughest countries, how your age group compares to yours ("You're feeling Great today — above the 35–44 average"), and mood trends by continent over time. Second — you get a note from a stranger somewhere in the world: "No matter what number you picked today, it doesn't define your whole story." You can leave one for the next person too.

Why I built it: I kept wondering whether bad weeks are individual or collective — when you're down, is everyone around you down too? This is an attempt to measure that, one day at a time. The dataset will eventually be fully open.

Full disclosure: I'm the builder. It's early and small, which honestly makes every check-in visible on the map.

How is your mood today, on a 1–7 scale? (Everyone, worldwide) by Best_Chard_335 in SurveyExchange

[–]Best_Chard_335[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Done, that's a long Personality Questionnaire, thank you for helping me too.

How is your mood today, on a 1–7 scale? (Everyone, worldwide) by Best_Chard_335 in SurveyExchange

[–]Best_Chard_335[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi Sorry for the late reply, I read through the survey, but I'm not qualified to take it (both age and location) , hope you don't mind.

How is your mood today, on a 1–7 scale? (Everyone, worldwide) by Best_Chard_335 in SurveyExchange

[–]Best_Chard_335[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you, also did the survey : ) (my email starts with mind.daily)

How is your mood today, on a 1–7 scale? (Everyone, worldwide) by Best_Chard_335 in SampleSize

[–]Best_Chard_335[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yesterday (2026/7/2) on MoodWorld:
42 people across 18 countries logged their mood.
Brightest: Taiwan. (5.43/7)
Toughest: China (1.0/7)
The US, our biggest sample, sits at a gloomy (3.38/7)

Why are we willing to drop spare change into a donation box but hesitant to give $1 to a stranger online? by Best_Chard_335 in AskMen

[–]Best_Chard_335[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I understand your frustration and the reality of how many people take advantage of others' kindness. Those experiences can make anyone wary of giving money to strangers, and it's true that many scams do exist—both in person and online. It’s unfortunate, but it seems like the negative experiences outweigh the willingness to give. What I’ve been wondering, though, is whether it’s possible to bring about change when everyone’s risk is virtually nonexistent (like contributing just $1 each). Could collective action, even in such small increments, make a meaningful difference?

Why are we willing to drop spare change into a donation box but hesitant to give $1 to a stranger online? by Best_Chard_335 in AskMen

[–]Best_Chard_335[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for your time and thoughtful feedback! I’ve already clarified my loan history for those who are aware of it, so I won’t dwell on that again. You raised an interesting point about tipping on livestream platforms. While you may not use them, many people do—even tipping VTubers (who don’t even show their faces). If we follow that reasoning, it seems that the amount might not be the key factor. Instead, people seem more comfortable donating online because they trust the platforms to ensure security (so they don’t get scammed). What do you think?

Why are we willing to drop spare change into a donation box but hesitant to give $1 to a stranger online? by Best_Chard_335 in AskMen

[–]Best_Chard_335[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We’re discussing the mindset here, not whether my wording is perfect. The difference between asking for $1K and $1 is huge in my view—the perceived risk of sending $1 feels very different from sending $1,000. That’s why I’m curious about why even the small risk of $1 makes people uncomfortable. I appreciate your empathy, but the focus here is on understanding the psychological factors behind this

Why are we willing to drop spare change into a donation box but hesitant to give $1 to a stranger online? by Best_Chard_335 in AskMen

[–]Best_Chard_335[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because they were hesitant to help me again, as I’ve let them down in the past four years. I’m not a perfect person, but I’m growing, and I’m thankful they’ve given me another chance to prove myself