Omoggle has not published its full scoring formula. What we can see is the product flow: camera check, Solo PSL scan, live 1v1 arena, ELO, ranks, and leaderboard.
So I would not describe this as "the official algorithm." A more honest way to think about it is:
Omoggle-style scores appear to combine face analysis, camera presentation, and live 1v1 comparison. The exact official algorithm is not public.
The part players actually care about is simpler: why did one scan look decent, while the next one dropped after changing the camera angle? Most of the time, the answer is not just facial structure. It is the whole webcam frame.
Try your own estimate with the Omoggle Score Calculator.
Short answer
From a player point of view, these are the things most likely to move an Omoggle-style face rating:
- Facial symmetry
- Facial harmony and proportions
- Jawline and lower third
- Eye area
- Canthal tilt
- Skin visibility and grooming
- Lighting
- Camera angle
- Framing
- Image sharpness
- Live comparison against another player
The key point: your score is not only your face. In a camera-first arena, the way your face appears on webcam can change the result.
1. Facial symmetry
Symmetry is one of the easiest face-analysis signals to understand. If your head is straight, a system can compare left and right facial landmarks and look for visible balance.
What can affect the read:
- Eye height difference
- Mouth corner height difference
- Nose alignment relative to the face center
- Chin alignment
- Left/right face width balance
However, camera angle can fake asymmetry. If your head is turned, tilted, or too close to the webcam, your face may look less balanced than it really is.
2. Facial harmony and proportions
Facial harmony is basically how balanced your visible features look inside the camera frame.
What can affect the read:
- Upper, middle, and lower face balance
- Eye spacing relative to face width
- Nose width relative to face width
- Mouth width relative to nose and jaw
- Chin and lower-third balance
- Overall feature spacing
This is one reason the same face can score differently in two photos. A low camera angle or wide-angle lens can stretch the lower face and change apparent proportions.
3. Jawline and lower third
In Omoggle and mogging culture, jawline visibility is a major visual factor.
What can affect the read:
- Jawline definition
- Chin visibility
- Lower-third proportion
- Neck and shadow separation
- Face-to-neck contrast
- Head position
A flat front light can reduce jawline definition. A low camera angle can also make the lower face look distorted. A slightly higher camera angle and better lighting can make the jawline read more clearly.
4. Eye area and canthal tilt
Eye area is another common face-rating factor. Articles about Omoggle have mentioned facial symmetry, canthal tilt, and jawline definition as examples of features involved in the AI scan.
What can affect the read:
- Eye visibility
- Eye height balance
- Eye shape visibility
- Inner and outer eye corner angle
- Brow/eye spacing
- Shadow around the eye area
This is not only about biological structure. If your eyes are hidden by shadow, blur, hair, glasses glare, or a bad camera angle, the scan can read worse than it should.
5. Lighting
Lighting is one of the easiest ways to change an Omoggle-style score.
Good lighting usually means:
- Your face is evenly visible.
- Your eyes are clear.
- Your jawline has enough contrast.
- There is no harsh backlight.
- There are no heavy shadows hiding key features.
Bad lighting can lower the score even if your facial structure is strong.
6. Camera angle
Camera angle can change apparent face shape.
Usually better:
- Camera at eye level or slightly above
- Face centered
- Some distance from the lens
- Slightly relaxed head position
Usually worse:
- Very low camera angle
- Camera too close to the face
- Heavy tilt
- Cropped chin or forehead
- Strong wide-angle distortion
If your Omoggle score changes a lot, camera angle is one of the first things to check.
7. Framing and visibility
The scan needs a clear face. Framing problems can reduce score confidence.
Common issues:
- Face too close to camera
- Face too far away
- Face cut off
- Hair, hat, hand, or microphone blocking landmarks
- Multiple faces in frame
- Motion blur
- Low resolution
Before entering a match, make sure your face is centered and fully visible.
8. What determines the winner in a 1v1?
A solo score and a 1v1 result are not always the same thing. In a live match, you are being compared inside a specific frame against another specific player.
In a duel, the winner may depend on:
- Your score
- Your opponent's score
- Camera quality difference
- Match context
- Live frame quality
- Rank/ELO context
Omoggle's official ELO page explains that ranked movement depends on who you beat: beating higher-rated players gives a bigger gain, while losing to lower-rated players costs more.
9. Is Omoggle accurate?
It depends on what you mean by accurate. If you mean "does it notice obvious camera problems," probably yes. If you mean "does it measure someone's real-world attractiveness with scientific certainty," no.
Omoggle-style scoring can be consistent about visible camera factors, but it should not be treated as an objective measure of human worth or attractiveness. Face-rating systems are sensitive to:
- Lighting
- Lens distortion
- Pose
- Expression
- Camera quality
- Data/model assumptions
- Scan failures
If you get a surprisingly low score, test a better photo or camera setup before assuming the result is meaningful.
10. Why the same person can get different scores
The same face can score differently because of:
- Different lighting
- Different lens distance
- Different head tilt
- Different expression
- Different sharpness
- Different background contrast
- Different webcam compression
- Scan confidence changes
That is why our Omoggle Score Calculator separates face-related factors from camera-related factors. It is more useful to know whether the problem is your setup, not just see one number.
Simple score factor checklist
Use this before your next scan:
| Factor | Bad setup | Better setup |
|---|---|---|
| Lighting | backlit or dim | soft front light |
| Camera angle | low and close | eye level or slightly above |
| Framing | face cropped | full face centered |
| Eye area | hidden by shadow | clearly visible |
| Jawline | flat lighting | slight contrast and distance |
| Expression | tense or awkward | relaxed and direct |
FAQ
What algorithm does Omoggle use?
Omoggle has not published its complete scoring formula. Public materials describe camera check, Solo PSL scan, live 1v1 arena, ELO, and ranks.
What determines my Omoggle score?
Likely visible factors include facial symmetry, proportions, jawline, eye area, lighting, camera angle, framing, and scan quality.
Does Omoggle only rate your face?
Not in practical use. Since Omoggle is camera-based, your webcam setup can strongly affect how your face is read.
Why did my score drop after changing camera angle?
Camera angle can change apparent symmetry, jawline visibility, eye area, and facial proportions.
Can I improve my Omoggle score?
You can often improve your Omoggle-ready score by improving lighting, camera angle, framing, and visibility. Start with the How to Win Omoggle guide.
