Verified or nah.
"Verified or nah." is Kala's brand line for the only question that matters about a catch: is there proof, or is it just a story?
"Verified or nah." is the whole thesis compressed into three words. Every catch you'll ever see falls into one of two buckets: it's verified, or it isn't. There's no third option and no benefit of the doubt required.
It's a brand line, but it's also a genuinely useful filter. Applied to your own catches it asks: do you want this to count, or is the story enough? Applied to everyone else's, it asks the question politely that comment sections ask rudely.
Verified or nah. Verified in stone.
Common questions
Is this just a slogan?
It's a slogan that happens to be the entire product strategy: proof versus story, no middle ground.
Does 'nah' mean the catch is fake?
No — it means unverified. Plenty of real fish are caught in Free Sessions; 'nah' just means there's no proof attached.
Where does the verified part come from?
From a verified session and a cleared submission standard — see Verified Fishing.