Pymetrics answers
Pymetrics questions, answered
Games-based assessment answers: what the games measure, whether you can fail, and how results are used.
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What Pymetrics is, and what candidates ask
Pymetrics, now part of Harver, is a games-based assessment that measures cognitive and behavioural traits rather than knowledge. Instead of maths or verbal questions, you play a series of short neuroscience-derived games (balloon-pumping, card decks, memory spans, reaction tasks) that capture how you make decisions, handle risk, learn from feedback and process information. Banks and consultancies use it early in graduate and internship recruiting in both the UK and US.
Because there are no right or wrong answers in the usual sense, candidates struggle to know what a good result looks like. The key idea is that Pymetrics does not rank you against a universal standard. It compares your trait profile to a model built from a firm own successful employees, so fit, not a high score, is what matters.
What the games actually measure
The games map to nine broad traits spanning effort, attention, decision-making, emotion, fairness, focus, generosity, learning and risk tolerance. No single game maps to a single trait, and the assessment cross-checks your behaviour across tasks, which is why trying to manufacture a particular trait usually backfires.
The reliable approach is to understand each game mechanic in advance so nothing is unfamiliar, then play naturally and consistently. Consistency is the signal the model reads most clearly.
What candidates ask us most
The common questions are whether you can fail, what a good score is, and how to prepare. You cannot fail in a pass or fail sense; you are matched or not matched to a role model, and a weak match at one firm can be a strong match at another. There is no universal score, only model fit. Preparation means learning the mechanics, not rehearsing answers.
How the answers help
The Q&As demystify the games and the matching model so you go in calm and consistent, which is precisely the state the games reward. Understanding the mechanics removes the surprise that makes people second-guess themselves mid-game.
The questions
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Can you fail pymetrics games?
Yes, you can effectively fail the Pymetrics games by being screened out of the recruitment process. While there is no traditional numerical failing score, employers match your unique cognitive and emotional trait profile against a benchmark built from their top-performing employees. If your profile does not align with that specific role benchmark, your application will be automatically rejected.
Read the answerHow do you prepare for pymetrics games?
You prepare for Pymetrics games by mastering the specific mechanical demands and cognitive constraints of each subtest rather than trying to engineer a false personality profile. Focus your training on eliminating mechanical latency, managing click-rate consistency, and minimizing response bias across the twelve exercises.
Read the answerWhat is a good pymetrics score?
A good Pymetrics score is not a numerical percentage, but a high-statistical match to a specific role profile. Pymetrics, now owned by Harver, evaluates your unique cognitive and emotional traits against a bespoke benchmark created by analyzing the employer's top-performing employees in that exact business function.
Read the answerCommon questions
Pymetrics: quick answers
Not in the traditional sense. Pymetrics matches your trait profile to a role model rather than marking you pass or fail. A weak match for one role or firm can be a strong match elsewhere, and many employers use it to route candidates rather than reject them outright.
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