You both approved and now you can see your shared answers. Here is how to read them.
The results show you the specific questions you both said yes to. These are your confirmed mutual interests -- the things you both independently said you are into. Everything else stays hidden. You will never see which questions the other person said no to, and they will never see yours.
A high overlap means you have a lot of common ground in the area you explored. If you used a rope list and you matched on most of the questions, that is a strong signal that a rope scene together could work well. It does not mean you should jump straight in -- it means you have a great starting point for a conversation about specifics.
A low overlap does not mean you are incompatible. It means that in this particular set of questions, you did not have much in common. Maybe you are into different types of impact play, or your D/s interests do not line up in this direction. That is useful information too. You might try a different list, or you might discover that your connection is better suited to a different area entirely.
The yes count in the summary -- the number you see before approving -- is a rough signal, not a verdict. Someone who said yes to 80% of questions might be very compatible with you, or they might not be answering carefully. Context matters.
Results are a conversation starter, not a contract. Knowing you both said yes to something means there is mutual interest -- it does not mean either of you is obligated to act on it. Use the results to have a real conversation about what you would enjoy, what your boundaries are, and what a good first step looks like.
If a test question warning appeared, take it seriously. It means the other person said yes to questions that were specifically flagged as unlikely genuine answers. This does not automatically mean they were being dishonest -- maybe they really are into everything -- but it is worth having a direct conversation about it.
You can always create another set later. Interests change, dynamics evolve, and there are a lot of lists to explore. One set does not define a connection.