Most tools ask one question, score your answer, and move on. Real interviewers dig. So does this.
The reason most prep tools feel hollow is that they're a quiz. You answer, you get a number, you get a fresh unrelated question. Nobody ever interviewed you that way. Probe builds each follow-up from what you actually just said — the way a real interviewer leans in when something doesn't add up.
Every answer can spawn a sharper follow-up — testing causation, tradeoffs, mechanism, or the bold claim you slipped past. Up to two deep, exactly like the real thing.
The wedgePractice against The Skeptic who challenges every claim, The Director running 30 minutes behind who wants the punchline, or the Amazon-style LP Hammerer. Difficulty dials nobody understands, replaced with people you'll recognize.
Recognizable archetypesSave your best answers as you go. Probe matches them to future questions — "angle your Stripe migration story for this leadership prompt." Most people fail interviews recycling three stories badly, not for lack of material.
Compounds over timeAfter a session, Probe finds the pattern across your answers — "buries the conclusion," "never quantifies impact" — and generates a focused five-question drill to fix exactly that. Each session makes the next one sharper.
AdaptivePaste the email and what you remember saying. Probe reconstructs the most likely reasons you were passed on — ranked, with evidence and a concrete fix for each. Free, no account. Then practice the role you just bombed.
Drop in your resume and the job description. Questions are anchored to your real experience and the role you're actually chasing.
Questions are read aloud. You answer out loud, the way you will in the room. Then the follow-ups come — built from what you said.
Honest score, specific critique, your answer restructured, and the 10/10 version. Then a drill targeting whatever you kept getting wrong.
Because the version of you that's heard the follow-up before is the one who gets the offer.