Not me. Nor any of my relatives/friends, who are all smart. Some of them are even gorgeous.
But we're all too intelligent to fall for that sctick, if used straight-up.
Even so, I'll admit that there are SOME PUA techniques that you can use and learn from. SuperMike said my bf was using PUA techniques and I

ed since if any of you met him, he'd seem like the biggest walking doormat ever. But he doesn't smother me, he never calls (well, he never calls anybody

) he basically tells me what his plans are and then asks me if I'm up for them. Now, I don't think he's gaming me by doing that, those are just natural behaviors for him. But they're
very general tenets of PUA.
Most women react this way. "Not ME! I'm way too smart to fall for any of that stupid PUA stuff."
Sure, if the guy does it in a horrible, obvious way, then you'll laugh it off. But the best pick-up artists (they even have a special acronym, mPUA - "master pick-up artist") are better than that. They've learned how to talk naturally and make up stuff on the spot rather than using canned material.
I've read plenty of stories of PUAs who successfully hooked up with women where the conversation started with her telling him how ridiculous this PUA stuff was and how she would never fall for any of it.
I once watched a David DeAngelo video on picking up women. I can't remember if it was him or one of his guest speakers who had several people from the audience come up to the front. Anyway, the speaker was giving tips on how to "charm" women by suddenly giving this cold reading of the woman shortly after introducing himself.
He advocated that those volunteers tried it, and they had to role play their efforts.
I have to say it looked absolutely ridiculous. It kind of went like this:
Man: "That was a great game of [eg basketball/sport ] last night don't you think?"
Woman: [some comment]
Man: "By the way, I'm so-and-so."
Woman: "Hi, I'm ...."
Man: "You know, you have a face that reveals X personality. I see it in your eyes... etc."
It was corny as that, and jumping from one thing to another as abruptly and as unnaturally as that, with no lead in or proper link between any of these methods. And the speaker was advocating this and trying to get the volunteers to work on this method.
Now tell me that any woman suddenly hearing a man doing this and jumping from one thing to another isn't going to think he's just trying to pick her up and sounding like he's just rehearsing a routine.
I can't see any smart woman really going for that, certainly the way it was presented and advocated there.
Again, it's hard to use a bunch of awkward seduction students as evidence of how the material works. You need to observe people who know what they're doing. The big danger, I find, is that it's easy to come off weird if you've got a non-stop barrage of material, to to the extent that people might be wondering, "is this guy some kind of weird comedian?"
Personally, although I read
The Game by Neil Strauss, the most valuable advice I ever got out of the whole seduction community was from David DeAngelo: the "Cocky/Funny" approach. I adopted that strategy and it definitely helped me get laid. What I like about it is that you don't have to remember specific lines or anything; it's just a general attitude.
What's more, that attitude works. If you act cocky, you're acting like
you're the prize, not the woman. People tend to want what they can't have, so it makes you seem more attractive. This works well when combined with negs, which illustrate to a woman that you're not impressed or intimidated by her looks, like most guys are - and any guy who wants to be attractive to women needs to stand out from the pack.
The "funny" part is more obvious, but it just reminds you not to take anything too seriously - to provide a lighthearted, entertaining interaction, which will be more attractive than the guy who approaches a woman nervously and takes any sign of rejection personally. The "game" metaphor is very helpful because any guy who takes approaching women too seriously, and lets rejection affect him, won't last too long.
One last thought:
The seduction community is constantly changing. Stuff that was once cutting-edge becomes tired and predictable once every guy starts using it. For example, one of the most cliched "pick-up lines" of all time is "what's your sign?" Nowadays, any guy who tried to use this line would be laughed out of the room. However, in the 1960s and 70s, when it originated, it was a way for a guy to prove he was deep, in-tune with his spiritual side in the Age of Aquarius, or whatever. In short, it was cutting-edge.
The same thing is happening with all this PUA stuff. Already, the other day I saw that Mystery has a new book out, where he updates his methods because since the publication of
The Game all the old techniques have become stale and ineffective through overuse. The discipline is constantly evolving.
It's interesting to observe the different approaches. Watch Mystery live in the field. He has the whole "peacocking" thing going on, so he dresses like a *****e in the Dr. Seuss hat, eyeliner and painted nails. He's trying to pick up club girls. At the same time, he undeniably piques their interest.
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Now, for a change, look at these guys from Simple Pickup. I only heard about them recently, but apparently they represent the new breed. If you look at them, they're just ordinary guys, maybe even a little nerdy. But they just go in there and start saying all kinds of stuff (in this case, lines from
Fresh Prince of Bel-Air). Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Yet it clearly seems more natural and endearing than Mystery's elaborate formula.
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Not saying one is better than the other, just different methods.