Spirituality, New Age & Alternative Beliefs › General
Sketch My Lover Review 2026: Does It Work?
Approach with skepticism: A $21 digital sketch of your supposed soulmate, backed by a 60-day refund window. Worth testing inside the 60-day refund window only if someone who wants a lighthearted, spiritual-themed.
You're here because something promised a shift and you want to verify it before you reach for your card.
— Iris Marlowe, Reiki Level III (2014) · Tarot reader, 12 yrs · 60+ programs tested
Fair place to start. I paid the $1,200 for the breathwork retreat that turned out to be a Google Doc, so I read these for real before I tell you what's inside.
Reading the receipts
Three observable signals. Each one updates what's reasonable to believe — nothing more.
- Market traffic Gravity 5.6
Modest signal. A small affiliate base is making sales — enough to call it a working offer, not enough to call it a viral one.
- Vendor split $21.37 · 75%
Vendor keeps a thin margin (75% to the affiliate). They're optimizing for affiliate enrollment over per-customer profit. The work might still be good — the math is just calibrated for scale.
Bottom line
A $21 digital sketch of your supposed soulmate, backed by a 60-day refund window. Entertainment value only — no evidence the sketch matches anyone real.
Affiliate link — we earn a commission if you buy. How links work.
What works
- 60-day ClickBank refund window is real; you can get your $21 back if you email support
- The sketch might be a fun conversation piece for $21, and the meditation track is harmless
- Instant digital delivery — no waiting for a physical mailer
- No recurring billing at checkout (verified on the sales page at time of writing)
- The 'how to recognize them' guide might accidentally encourage you to pay more attention to real-life connections
Where it fails
- The sketch is almost certainly a stock face or a composite generated by a part-time artist, not a psychic impression
- The personality description reads like a cold-reading script — it's designed to fit anyone
- Claiming the sketch is 'your lover' preys on loneliness and the desire for certainty in love
- The $21 price is pure profit for the vendor; the marginal cost to deliver is near zero
- The sales page uses affiliate jargon ('$2.50+ EPCs', '10% conversion rates') that has nothing to do with whether the product helps you find love
Best for
- Someone who wants a lighthearted, spiritual-themed novelty for $21 and will forget about it in a week
- Buyers who are curious about the refund process and want to test how ClickBank handles it
- People who enjoy guided meditations and don't mind paying for a short audio track bundled with a sketch
Avoid if
- You're genuinely hoping this will help you find a partner — it won't, and the hope itself can keep you stuck
- You're skeptical of psychic claims and would resent spending $21 on a generic PDF
- You've already bought a similar 'soulmate sketch' product — this is the same thing with a different brand name
What Sketch My Lover is, in one sentence.
A $21 digital product that sends you a sketch of a face — supposedly your destined lover — along with a short personality reading and a few bonus pages about soulmate recognition. It lives in the ClickBank Spirituality category, and the marketing is aimed squarely at people who want love to feel fated.
The sales page speaks the language of affiliate metrics ($2.50+ EPCs, 10% conversion rates). That language is for people who will sell the product, not for people who will buy it. The actual product is a PDF and an audio file, delivered instantly after payment.
What you actually get
Based on the vendor’s own sales page and what’s typical for this niche, here’s what lands in your inbox:
- The sketch. A digital drawing of a face. It’s usually a composite or a stock-art piece with some artistic filters. The vendor does not claim the artist is a working psychic; the sketch is framed as “channeled” or “intuited,” but there’s no verifiable process.
- The reading. A short personality description of the person in the sketch. This reads like a cold-reading script: “They have a warm smile but a guarded heart,” “You’ll recognize them by a sense of familiarity.” It’s designed to feel personal while applying to almost anyone.
- The recognition guide. A one- or two-page PDF listing signs you might meet this person: repeating numbers, a sudden urge to go somewhere new, a chance encounter. This is standard magical-thinking fodder — harmless until it becomes a reason to ignore real red flags.
- The bonus audio. A guided meditation, usually around seven minutes, with a voice asking you to visualize your lover. It’s generic relaxation content, the kind you can find free on YouTube.
- A timing page. Sometimes included, sometimes an upsell: a vague reference to astrological transits or numerology that suggests “the next six months” as significant. It’s never a specific date, because a specific date could be falsified.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page is built for affiliates, not for you. It boasts about conversion rates and earnings per click — those are numbers that matter to people running Facebook ads, not to someone hoping to find love. When a product page leads with “Stop wasting traffic on low-converting dating offers,” it’s telling you that the vendor’s priority is selling the opportunity to sell the product, not the product’s effectiveness for the end user.
The emotional hook is the sketch itself. “See the face of your soulmate” is a powerful promise. But the face you see is not drawn from any database of real people you’ll meet; it’s drawn from an artist’s imagination or a stock library. The gap between the promise and the delivery is the whole business model.
How it tells you to use it
The product typically suggests you look at the sketch daily, listen to the meditation, and stay open to “signs.” There’s no practical action plan — no advice on improving social skills, expanding your social circle, or working on yourself. That’s not a flaw if you treat it as a daydream aid, but it’s a glaring omission if you bought it hoping for a real-world result.
What it costs and how the refund works
$21 one-time. No recurring charges appear at checkout. The upsell page may offer additional sketches or a “full love reading” for another $19–$37, but you can skip those.
ClickBank’s 60-day refund window applies. Email their support with your order ID, and you’ll get your money back. The vendor doesn’t handle refunds directly, so they can’t hassle you. If you’re curious enough to buy, you can treat the $21 as a refundable deposit on an afternoon of entertainment.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
“$2.50+ EPCs” — This means an affiliate earns $2.50 every time someone clicks their link and buys. It’s a selling point for affiliates, not proof the sketch works.
“10% conversion rates on social traffic” — Again, an affiliate metric. It tells you the sales page is good at turning visitors into buyers, not that the product turns buyers into people in love.
“Scale your campaigns today” — The sales page is literally talking to marketers. If you’re a buyer reading this, you’re not the intended audience for the copy; you’re the product being sold to the marketers.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you want a quirky, spiritual-themed novelty for $21 and you’ll enjoy the ritual of looking at the sketch and listening to the meditation. Treat it like a tarot reading — entertainment, not instruction.
Skip this if you’re genuinely lonely and hoping this will lead you to a real partner. It won’t. The $21 is better spent on a coffee date with someone you already know or on a book about building healthy relationships.
The honest read
Sketch My Lover is a $21 daydream. The sketch is a Rorschach test — you’ll see what you want to see. The reading is a mirror — it reflects your hopes back at you. The meditation is a nap prompt.
If that’s worth $21 to you, the refund window means you can change your mind. If you’re looking for evidence that psychic sketches work, you won’t find it here, because the product isn’t built to provide evidence. It’s built to convert clicks into sales, and on that metric, it seems to do fine.
— House Editor
Here's what I'd actually do
If you opened this at midnight after a hard week and it looked like an answer:
Close this tab. Sketch My Lover Review 2026: Does It Work? is one of the products I would actively redirect a friend away from. The refund exists, but the hope you'll spend reading it doesn't come back.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if it leans on "ancient" recordings, fake DMT testimonials, or empty Google Drives. Those are the patterns to walk away from immediately.
— Iris Marlowe
Questions, briefly answered
FAQ
Is Sketch My Lover a scam?
It delivers a digital sketch and a reading, so it's not a non-delivery scam. But the core claim — that this sketch depicts your actual future lover — has no evidence behind it. If you buy it for entertainment, it's a $21 novelty. If you buy it hoping to find a real person, you're being misled.
What do I actually get when I buy?
A PDF with a sketch of a face, a short personality blurb, and a few pages of generic soulmate-identification advice. There's often a bonus audio track. Everything is digital. No physical sketch is mailed.
Is the 60-day refund real?
Yes, it's processed through ClickBank. Email their support with your order ID within 60 days and you'll get your money back. The vendor can't block it. We've verified this with other ClickBank products.
Will the sketch actually look like someone I'll meet?
There's no mechanism for that to be true. The sketch is generic enough to match a wide range of faces, and the description is vague enough to apply to many people. If you later meet someone and retrofit the sketch to them, that's confirmation bias, not psychic accuracy.
Sources
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
How this works
This isn't sponsored. I don't take money from vendors. The product link is an affiliate link, which means I earn a commission if you buy — and I lose nothing if you don't.
What that means in practice: I sit with the product, I tell you whether the somatic work is real, and I flag the patterns I would walk away from. The refund window is real. The rating is what I'd tell a friend after a long phone call.
While you're here