Honest comparison of the 8 PSL face-rating tools in 2026 — webcam required vs. not, stranger pairing vs. solo, what each one actually scores, who each one fits.
Updated June 3, 2026 · 8 platforms tested · Safety calls based on published privacy policies

Tap to visit. Full breakdown below.
Players who want the competitive ladder — the actual public scoreboard climb.
Training mode — diagnose your weak PSL category, follow a plan, then come back to Omoggle to test the climb.
Backup option if Omoggle is down or queue-locked.
Users who want a smaller, less viral platform with less algorithm-warp from streamer traffic.
Probably skip unless the main Omoggle is unavailable for your region.
The alternatives split into two camps. Direct substitutes (Mog Omegle, Omogle.me, FrameMoggle) replicate Omoggle’s live-video mechanic — same intent, smaller user base, less audit attention. Complementary tools (Mogged) use the same PSL scoring system but solo, no webcam, no stranger pairing, with a per-category breakdown useful for training. Most users actually need both: Mogged to find what to fix, Omoggle to verify the climb.
Each one rated on what they actually do, what they require, and who they fit.

Score type: PSL 0-10 per round
Safety read: Adult-OK (architecture clean, MediaPipe client-side, no face data uploaded). 18+ gate unverified — real concern is teen access.
Best for: Players who want the competitive ladder — the actual public scoreboard climb.

Score type: PSL 0-10 + 4-category breakdown
Safety read: Adult and teen safe (no live video, no stranger pairing, photo discarded after scan). Same MediaPipe layer underneath.
Best for: Training mode — diagnose your weak PSL category, follow a plan, then come back to Omoggle to test the climb.

Score type: PSL 0-10 per round
Safety read: Less documented than Omoggle. Privacy policy and data architecture not as transparently published. Treat as functionally similar to Omoggle but with less third-party scrutiny.
Best for: Backup option if Omoggle is down or queue-locked.

Score type: PSL 0-10 + ELO
Safety read: Separately operated from Omoggle. Independent privacy policy. Smaller user base means smaller leaderboard pool — if you want competitive ranking, the pool depth matters.
Best for: Users who want a smaller, less viral platform with less algorithm-warp from streamer traffic.

Score type: PSL 0-10
Safety read: Clone-class — less documentation on data architecture, less audit attention, smaller user base. Privacy posture: undocumented.
Best for: Probably skip unless the main Omoggle is unavailable for your region.
Score type: Varies — often single-number with no breakdown
Safety read: Highly variable. Many don't disclose where photos are processed or stored. If using one, check the privacy policy explicitly.
Best for: Curiosity scoring, but the single-number output makes them useless for training — you can't fix what you can't diagnose.
Score type: Subjective
Safety read: Safest. No data, no platform.
Best for: Reality check — algorithmic scores often differ from how rooms actually read you. Cross-check periodically.
Side-by-side comparison across the 5 main contenders. Greens = supported, reds = not, yellows = partial.
| Feature | Omoggle | Mogged | Mog Omegle | Omogle.me | Clones |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Live opponent (real-time stranger pairing) | optional | ||||
| Public ELO leaderboard | |||||
| 4-category PSL breakdown (not just one number) | |||||
| 30-day improvement plan tied to weak category | |||||
| Works without a webcam | |||||
| Public privacy policy + documented architecture | partial | ||||
| Photo discarded after analysis | n/a (live video) | n/a | n/a | ||
| Free with no signup | partial | ||||
| Allowed on Twitch (May 2026 update) | uncertain | ||||
| Recommended for teens / under-18 |
Quick read: if you want competitive ELO, Omoggle. If you want a per-category diagnostic + no-cam option, Mogged. The clones are functionally similar to Omoggle but with less audit attention — only use as backups.
Match what you actually want to the option that fits.
“I want the competitive Omoggle climb but it's down / queue-locked”
Try Mog Omegle or Omogle.me as direct substitutes. Same competitive mechanic, smaller user base. Verify the privacy policy first.
“I want to improve my PSL score, not climb a public leaderboard”
Use Mogged. Same scoring system Omoggle uses, plus a per-category breakdown and 30-day plan for your weakest category. No webcam, no opponent, no public scoreboard.
“I don't want my face data on any platform”
Skip live-video platforms entirely. Use Mogged in solo mode (photo discarded after scan) or do the in-person mirror comparison.
“I want the score without showing my face to a stranger”
Mogged's photo-upload mode is the cleanest fit. Same PSL category breakdown, no live pairing.
“I'm under 18”
Skip Omoggle, Mog Omegle, and the clones — the 18+ gate is unverified but the live-stranger-video mechanic is the real concern. Mogged's photo scan works without any video or pairing.
If the live-stranger-video mechanic is the dealbreaker, Mogged is the closest fit. Same PSL scoring system as Omoggle (same 4 categories, same MediaPipe landmarks underneath), no live video, no random pairing, no public leaderboard.
Photo upload, AI scan in 60 seconds, 4-category PSL breakdown (Harmony · Dimorphism · Angularity · Misc), tier verdict, and a 30-day plan for whichever category is the weak link. No webcam, no signup, no public scoreboard. Photo discarded immediately after scoring.
Take The Free PSL TestNo signup · No webcam · Photo discarded after scan
On Omoggle: the technical architecture is cleaner than most assume. Facial landmarks process client-side via MediaPipe, live video doesn’t get recorded, the privacy policy explicitly covers GDPR/CCPA. The legitimate concern is the unverified 18+ gate plus the live-stranger-video mechanic itself — same architectural issue Omegle ran into for 14 years.
On the clones: they replicate Omoggle’s mechanic but without the same audit attention. Less third-party review, less transparent privacy policies, smaller user bases. They’re not automatically unsafe — they’re just less verified. If you’re going to use a live-video PSL platform, Omoggle is the better-documented option.
On the solo tools (Mogged): the architecture is structurally safer because there’s no live video, no random pairing, and no public scoreboard. Photos go through the same MediaPipe layer the live platforms use, then get discarded after scoring. No teen-access concern, no stranger-pairing concern.
The honest meta: no PSL scoring tool — live or solo, big or small — is a verdict on you. Per the Solea & Sugiura 2025 paper, the PSL framework “extrapolates beyond what peer-reviewed research actually supports.” Treat any score as directional, not definitive.
The main options split into two categories: direct substitutes (Mog Omegle, Omogle.me, FrameMoggle / OmoggleGame) — same live-video face-off mechanic, smaller user base, less audit attention; and complementary tools (Mogged) — same PSL scoring system but solo, no webcam, no stranger pairing, with a 4-category breakdown that's useful for training. Pick based on whether you want the competitive climb (substitutes) or want to actually improve your score (Mogged).
Yes — Mogged is the closest fit. Photo upload mode runs the same PSL category analysis Omoggle uses (Harmony, Dimorphism, Angularity, Misc) without any live video. The photo is discarded after scoring. Other generic AI face-rating sites also work this way but most don't give a category breakdown, so they're useless for actually improving your score.
Yes — solo PSL scoring exists without the random-stranger mechanic. Mogged works this way (photo or selfie, AI scan, results in 60 seconds). The trade-off: no public ELO leaderboard, no live competition. The benefit: no stranger pairing concerns, works for anyone, includes a per-category diagnostic.
By data architecture: Mogged (no live video, photo discarded post-scan, no random pairing). By technical transparency: Omoggle publishes a clear privacy policy and its scoring runs client-side via MediaPipe — cleaner than most assume. The clones (FrameMoggle, OmoggleGame) are the least documented and the highest risk. In-person mirror comparison is the only zero-data option.
Functionally similar — same live face-off mechanic, same PSL scoring on a 0-10 scale, same ELO ladder concept. Different operator, separate user base, separate privacy policy. Mog Omegle has less third-party documentation than Omoggle, so the data architecture is less verified. Best used as a substitute when the main Omoggle queue is unavailable.
Different purpose. Omoggle is the competitive arena — live opponent, ELO change per round, public leaderboard climb. Mogged is the training ground — solo scan, 4-category breakdown (so you know which dimension is weakest), 30-day improvement plan. The scoring system is shared (same PSL scale, same 4 categories, same MediaPipe landmark layer). The intent split: use Mogged to fix the weak spot, use Omoggle to verify the climb.
Depends on what you want. For pure competitive ranking, Omoggle has the biggest user base, the most documented architecture, and the most viral momentum — there isn't a clearly better one for that intent. For actually improving your score, Omoggle is the wrong tool — it doesn't tell you what to fix. Mogged is better for that intent because it breaks the score into the 4 categories that drive it and tells you which one is dragging you down.
Not for the live face-off mode — that's the entire mechanic. Omoggle does have a "solo lab" mode that scans your face without an opponent, but it still requires the camera. If you want PSL scoring without any live video, use Mogged's photo-upload mode — it runs the same scoring system without a webcam at all.
Less documented than Omoggle. The clones (FrameMoggle, OmoggleGame, etc.) have smaller user bases, less audit attention, and less transparent privacy policies. They're not necessarily unsafe — but you can't easily verify their data practices. If you're going to use a live-video face-rating platform, Omoggle is the better-documented choice. Mogged is the safest option overall because it doesn't require live video at all.
The full picture — Omoggle, the PSL system, training tactics.