The RizzStats Feature Nobody Opens: Your Activity Timeline and Streaks, Explained
The RizzStats Feature Nobody Opens: Your Activity Timeline and Streaks, Explained
Most people upload their export at /upload, watch the Rizz Score load, screenshot it, and close the tab. Fair enough — it's the headline number.
But the two tabs sitting right next to it, the activity timeline and streaks, are doing more work than people give them credit for. They're not decoration. They're the raw material the Rizz Score is built from, and on their own they tell you things the score can't.
Here's how to actually use them.
What the activity timeline is showing you
Once your Tinder or Hinge export is processed, RizzStats lays your swiping activity out chronologically — every day you were on the app, plotted against every day you weren't.
At a glance this just looks like a chart. Read it slower and it's closer to a diary. You'll see the week you were swiping every night. You'll see the three-month gap where you clearly deleted the app after a breakup and reinstalled it in a mood. You'll see whether your matches cluster around specific bursts of activity or show up steadily regardless of how much you're swiping.
That last part matters more than it sounds. If your match rate holds steady whether you're swiping for ten minutes or two hours, that's useful information — it means volume isn't your bottleneck. If matches only show up during short, focused bursts, that's a different signal entirely.
What streaks actually measure
The streaks tab counts consecutive days of activity — not matches, not messages, just days you were actually in the app doing something. It's the simplest metric in the whole product and also the easiest one to misread.
A long streak isn't automatically good. It just means you were consistent. Whether that consistency helped depends entirely on what your match rate and reply rate were doing during that same window, which is why streaks are meant to be read next to the timeline, not instead of it.
Where streaks are genuinely useful is spotting your own patterns of burnout. If your longest streaks reliably end right before a long dead period, that's a rhythm worth noticing before you repeat it again.
How this connects to your Rizz Score
The Rizz Score pulls together your match rate, reply rate, activity timeline, and streaks into a single number. That's convenient for a quick read, but it also means the score can hide the reason behind itself.
Two people can land on the same score for completely different reasons — one from steady, moderate activity with an average reply rate, another from a short, intense burst with a great reply rate followed by months of nothing. The score treats those similarly. The timeline and streaks are where you'd actually see the difference.
A simple way to use these tabs
- Open your timeline first, before the score.
- Find your three most active stretches.
- Check whether match rate and reply rate moved with those stretches or stayed flat.
- Look at streaks to see if those stretches were sustained or one-off bursts.
- Only then look at the Rizz Score, now with context for what's actually driving it.
None of this is a coaching layer telling you what to do differently. It's just your own data, laid out in order, so the score means something more specific than a single number can on its own.