PsyOp Probability Checker – 20-Point Worksheet

What is this tool?

The Narrative-Credibility Index (NCI) is a 20-question worksheet that turns gut-level suspicion into a measurable score. Whether you’re looking at a viral TikTok, a breaking-news headline, or a friend’s Facebook post, the checklist helps you spot the classic fingerprints of a psychological operation (psy-op) before you hit share or send.

How to use it

  1. Read / watch the content once.
  2. Work through each item: 0 = not present, 5 = screaming loud.
  3. Add the column. A total ≥ 70 means the story shows the same emotional and structural tricks used in military-grade information warfare—treat it as deliberate manipulation until proven otherwise.

PsyOp Probability Checker

Narrative-credibility Index (NCI)

20-Point Narrative-Credibility Index (NCI) – score any story, post, or video

# Item Typical red-flag example Score 0-5
1Strong emotional hookHeadline: “Children will die unless…”; thumbnail of crying baby
2Clear villain“Big Pharma”, “the deep state”, “Putin”, “the unvaxxed”—pure evil
3Clear hero / saviour“Brave truckers”, “President X”, “This little-known supplement”
4Us-vs-Them framing“Patriots vs. globalists”, “citizens vs. elites”
5Over-simplified cause“Gas prices high ONLY because of greedy CEOs”
6Urgent call to action“Share before they delete it!”, “Call Congress TODAY”
7Little hard evidenceNo links, no data—just screenshots or “trust me”
8Anonymous / unverifiable sources“High-level Pentagon source”, deleted tweet
9Story changes or vanishesURL 404s after 24 h; headline quietly edited
10Heavy visual symbolismFlags, eagles, red/black colours, raised fist
11Repetitive slogans“Build back better”, “Stop the steal”, “Safe and effective”
12Black-and-white morality“If you question this you support terrorists”
13Appeals to authority without data“The CDC says…” (no study cited)
14Social-proof bandwagon“Everyone knows this”, ticker: “1.2 M likes”
15Doomsday framing“Civil war by Christmas”, “Mass die-off imminent”
16Too-good-to-be-true promise“Earn $10 k a week working 2 h/day”
17Critics instantly demonised“Shills”, “Russian bots”, “conspiracy theorists”
18Convenient timingStory drops same day as big vote, IPO, rival scandal
19Cross-platform blastIdentical wording on Twitter, TikTok, Telegram within minutes
20No opposing view shownComments disabled, “fact-checkers are biased”
Total Score
0 / 100

How to interpret

  • 0 – 39   Low probability (still verify)
  • 40 – 69   Mixed / stay sceptic
  • 70 – 100   High probability of psy-op narrative


Why care about psy-ops?

Psychological operations aren’t movie plots—they’re daily tools used by governments, corporations, extremist groups, and click-bait farms. Their single aim is to change what you feel so they can steer what you do: vote, buy, protest, or simply panic-scroll and watch more ads.

Classic recipe

  • Emotional spike (fear, pride, outrage) to short-circuit critical thinking.
  • False urgency (“Act now, before it’s too late!”) to bypass second opinions.
  • Villain + saviour narrative to give you a ready-made identity group.
  • Repeat, repeat, repeat until the story feels like common knowledge.

Real-world ripple effects

  • Health psy-ops can drive people to abandon life-saving medicine.
  • Political psy-ops can suppress voter turnout or incite violence.
  • Market psy-ops can inflate or crash stocks, currencies, or crypto.
  • Social psy-ops can fracture families and friendships in a weekend.

Take-away

You don’t need to become a professional fact-checker—just slow the spread. When a story scores high on the NCI, pause, demand primary sources, and let the temperature drop before you amplify it. In the information age, attention is the real currency; spend yours on signal, not noise.

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