I am not an incel. I get laid.
This is a seducer board, not an incel board. The focus of this forum is not incel lifestyle but a lifestyle in which a man has sex with women.
3. College grad? What major?
4. Had meaningful employment? (above minimum wage).
These two questions overlap a bit.
College degrees are overrated.
The relationship between a bachelor's or advanced level degree and getting laid is unclear.
There are plenty of broke men with high school diplomas or GEDs who are getting a lot of vagina. These guys are typically tattooed dirtbags who look like they've been in prison and many have served jail/prison time. These men have the bad boy appeal. They are either working blue collar/manual labor jobs or other menial jobs like working a warehouse or line cook in a restaurant and they get laid. They are often getting laid with lower quality women, like Walmart or dollar store cashiers, but it happens.
An uneducated guy needs to give off an IDGAF vibe, look dangerous, and have the bad boy appeal to get laid.
An uneducated dweebish guy working at GameStop with acne and a neckbeard is not going to get laid.
Plenty of college educated men aren't getting laid either. These men are often men with bachelor's or advanced degrees in STEM fields. STEM majors tend to lack social skills, making all forms of Game more difficult. There are also men with degrees in social sciences or business and non-STEM jobs not getting laid too.
There was a recent thread on here about college educated men, typically 30+ making between $75,000 - $125,000/year, have decent social skills and fitness, and struggling to attract women.
Men in this category, $75k-$125k salary, relatively in shape, drive a good car, has a few hobbies, women do not want. Why? Because this man has standards. Women do not want to work for their men. Women of today want a simp or a millionaire. Simple as that. This is what society aka social media...
www.sosuave.net
5. Use a flip phone or smartphone? Age upgraded to smartphone?
A flip phone repels vagina. This question hasn't been relevant since the early 2010s. iPhones were first introduced in 2007. By 2009-2010, White, college educated women in big cities were expecting the men that approached them or arranged dates with them from online dating to have smartphones. Non-White women and women in rural areas were a couple years behind the 2009-2010 timeline in terms of their expectation, but not that far behind.