A Tech Guy’s Guide to Fixing a Dating Profile

Your Dating Profile Is Buggy

If your dating profile isn’t working, it’s probably not because you’re boring. It’s because your profile logic is off — like poorly scoped functions or unnecessary boilerplate code.

Let’s debug it.

Most tech guys think the goal of a dating profile is to showcase achievements, stats, or status. But here’s the truth: what you think works, and what actually works, are rarely the same.

Your goal isn’t to impress.

It’s to spark curiosity and filter in the right kind of match.

3 Red Flags in Tech Guy Bios

Overly logical: “6ft, INTP, love AI and chess.”
Reads more like a dev résumé than someone she wants to talk to.

Undersharing: “Ask me anything.”
Translation: I don’t want to put in effort, you go first.

Swipe fatigue jokes: “Ugh, I hate this app.”
If your opener is bitter, what else is coming?

I'm here if you customized feedback💋

Now let’s fix that.

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What To Include Instead: One vivid, quirky detail. A hint of realness or vulnerability. A values-aligned invitation to connect

Examples: “I get overly competitive at pub quizzes. You’ve been warned.”
or
“Dad jokes. Black coffee. Overthinking my playlist order.”

These work because they create a feeling. They show you have a personality, a life, a point of view. They don’t scream, “Pick me!” — they invite someone to join you in your weirdness.

And that’s the point.
You’re not trying to please everyone.
You’re polarising on purpose.

This is filtering. Your profile is a lens — not a pitch deck. The women who vibe with you will lean in. Those who don’t? Good. Let them swipe.

Good code runs lean and clean. Your profile should, too.

Still here for you... 💋

Want a full teardown of your profile — with my comments, rewrite, and why it works?

Get unstuck.
Write a profile that pulls the right person in.
Let’s fix your bugs. terminal. Now wait for the return.

Help me help you 💋
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