Foundation
The Rating Standard
One standardized rating language across every category. Same four reactions, same OmniScore, same credibility rules — whether the item is a game, a movie, a book, a meal, a product, or a service. Your taste profile travels with you.
One universal score
Every item — regardless of category — receives a single OmniScore from 0 to 100. There are no separate public scores per category. OmniScore is built from rater reactions and trusted external signals, weighted by credibility over time.
Four standardized reactions
Every rater uses the same four inputs. They mean the same thing across every category.
Credibility, not loudness
A rater's influence on OmniScore grows with category experience, rating history, consistency, agreement patterns with other trusted raters, rank, and verification. The structure is in place; weighting will be tuned as data accumulates.
Categories
Games is the first active category. The rating model, reactions, and OmniScore are designed to extend cleanly to the categories below without changing the rating language.
Accolades — rare prestige statuses
OmniScore is always the primary number. On top of it, two rare reputation statuses exist — universal across every category, from games to movies, books, food, products, and services.
Accolades are intentionally rare. They require minimum rating volume, high confidence, an established score maturity, and a non-stabilizing window — small samples, early review bombs, or rating bursts cannot trigger them.