I've been thinking about something that kind of contradicts the core belief of this community, and I want to have an honest discussion about it.
We spend hours obsessing over canthal tilt, jawline, mewing, skin routines — and yeah, looks matter, I'm not denying that. But when you actually study history's most successful seducers, a pattern emerges that should make us uncomfortable: most of them were mid at best.
Casanova — the guy whose name literally became a synonym for seduction — was described by contemporaries as having a large nose, a heavy frame, and unremarkable features. No one ever called him handsome. What they DID describe was his ability to make every woman feel like she was the only person in the room. He spoke multiple languages, was deeply well-read, and had an almost obsessive understanding of female psychology. His weapon wasn't his face — it was his frame, his presence, and his ability to create emotional intensity.
Serge Gainsbourg — arguably the most seductive man in 20th century France. Google his face. The man looked rough by any conventional standard. Gap teeth, a crooked nose, heavy features. Yet he was with Brigitte Bardot, Jane Birkin, and dozens of other women who were considered the most beautiful of their era. When asked about it, Birkin said something along the lines of: "He had five minutes to convince you he was handsome, and he only needed three." That's not looks. That's frame and charisma operating at a level most people never develop.
Henry Kissinger — a short, overweight, balding diplomat who once said "power is the ultimate aphrodisiac." He wasn't wrong about his own life. The man was constantly seen with models and actresses throughout the 70s. Not because of his bone structure, obviously, but because status and strategic social intelligence function as attraction multipliers in ways that pure aesthetics can't.
Rasputin — a dirty, unkempt Siberian mystic who had enormous sexual influence over the Russian aristocracy. Contemporary accounts describe him as physically repulsive by normal standards, yet multiple noblewomen were drawn to him. His weapon was psychological dominance — an unshakable frame and an intensity that people found impossible to ignore.
Toulouse-Lautrec — 4'8", visibly disabled from a genetic condition, not even close to conventional attractiveness. Still managed to be deeply embedded in the romantic and sexual culture of Montmartre and had multiple relationships.
So here's my actual question: if looks were truly everything — the way this community sometimes frames it — how did these men even exist? These aren't isolated outliers. Across centuries and cultures, the pattern repeats: men who understood psychology, status, and emotional manipulation consistently outperformed men who were just physically attractive.
I'm not saying stop looksmaxing. Improving your appearance is a real advantage, and first impressions matter. But I think we collectively underestimate the ceiling of what charisma, social intelligence, and psychological frame can achieve — and overestimate the ceiling of looks alone.
What's your take? Is looks the foundation and everything else is a multiplier? Or can game genuinely compensate for below-average looks?
We spend hours obsessing over canthal tilt, jawline, mewing, skin routines — and yeah, looks matter, I'm not denying that. But when you actually study history's most successful seducers, a pattern emerges that should make us uncomfortable: most of them were mid at best.
Casanova — the guy whose name literally became a synonym for seduction — was described by contemporaries as having a large nose, a heavy frame, and unremarkable features. No one ever called him handsome. What they DID describe was his ability to make every woman feel like she was the only person in the room. He spoke multiple languages, was deeply well-read, and had an almost obsessive understanding of female psychology. His weapon wasn't his face — it was his frame, his presence, and his ability to create emotional intensity.
Serge Gainsbourg — arguably the most seductive man in 20th century France. Google his face. The man looked rough by any conventional standard. Gap teeth, a crooked nose, heavy features. Yet he was with Brigitte Bardot, Jane Birkin, and dozens of other women who were considered the most beautiful of their era. When asked about it, Birkin said something along the lines of: "He had five minutes to convince you he was handsome, and he only needed three." That's not looks. That's frame and charisma operating at a level most people never develop.
Henry Kissinger — a short, overweight, balding diplomat who once said "power is the ultimate aphrodisiac." He wasn't wrong about his own life. The man was constantly seen with models and actresses throughout the 70s. Not because of his bone structure, obviously, but because status and strategic social intelligence function as attraction multipliers in ways that pure aesthetics can't.
Rasputin — a dirty, unkempt Siberian mystic who had enormous sexual influence over the Russian aristocracy. Contemporary accounts describe him as physically repulsive by normal standards, yet multiple noblewomen were drawn to him. His weapon was psychological dominance — an unshakable frame and an intensity that people found impossible to ignore.
Toulouse-Lautrec — 4'8", visibly disabled from a genetic condition, not even close to conventional attractiveness. Still managed to be deeply embedded in the romantic and sexual culture of Montmartre and had multiple relationships.
So here's my actual question: if looks were truly everything — the way this community sometimes frames it — how did these men even exist? These aren't isolated outliers. Across centuries and cultures, the pattern repeats: men who understood psychology, status, and emotional manipulation consistently outperformed men who were just physically attractive.
I'm not saying stop looksmaxing. Improving your appearance is a real advantage, and first impressions matter. But I think we collectively underestimate the ceiling of what charisma, social intelligence, and psychological frame can achieve — and overestimate the ceiling of looks alone.
What's your take? Is looks the foundation and everything else is a multiplier? Or can game genuinely compensate for below-average looks?