The viral SBTI personality test

Discover your silly big personality type before the group chat does.

I posted my result and the chat started arguing with the algorithm.

Answer fast. SBTI rewards instinct more than polish.

How it works

Three steps, one share card

The experience is built to feel quick and specific.

Answer instinctively

The prompts are quick and pointed. The first honest reaction usually wins.

Get your type

The test scores three axes and turns them into one of 27 SBTI profiles.

Share the card

Every result page is built to be reposted, screenshotted, and argued with.

The one-line hook

SBTI is what happens when MBTI gets internet-native.

The test is designed for speed, recognition, and reposts. That is the whole point.

Read the FAQ

Why people repost

It feels accurate, but still fun to share

The result reads like a verdict, not a spreadsheet.

Brutally specific

The result is concrete enough to feel personal and funny enough to forward.

Designed for sharing

The result page reads like a poster, not a dead end.

Fast enough to finish

The experience is short, sharp, and easy to finish in one sitting.

Featured types

A few cards from the 27-type library

The full library lives on the Types page.

SBTI-01 #01

Whisper Drift Soft

quiet signal · exploration first · low friction

You prefer selective visibility and quiet leverage. You make small signals feel intentional. You explore until the shape is undeniable. You find angles other people miss. You lower friction and keep the tone human. People stay because they feel safe.

SBTI-14 #14

Pulse Stride Bright

room-aware momentum · clean systems · easy to read

You read the room quickly and move with it. You make momentum feel social and alive. You like a steady rhythm that holds under pressure. You make progress feel dependable. You make the answer easy to read and repeat. You package complexity into shareable form.

SBTI-27 #27

Broadcast Sprint Sharp

high reach · fast when it counts · contrarian contrast

You make the signal loud enough to travel. You create momentum by making things obvious. You accelerate hard once the moment is real. You can turn a short window into visible movement. You cut through noise with contrast. You trigger reaction and rememberability.

SBTI-05 #05

Whisper Stride Bright

quiet signal · clean systems · easy to read

You prefer selective visibility and quiet leverage. You make small signals feel intentional. You like a steady rhythm that holds under pressure. You make progress feel dependable. You make the answer easy to read and repeat. You package complexity into shareable form.

SBTI-10 #10

Pulse Drift Soft

room-aware momentum · exploration first · low friction

You read the room quickly and move with it. You make momentum feel social and alive. You explore until the shape is undeniable. You find angles other people miss. You lower friction and keep the tone human. People stay because they feel safe.

SBTI-23 #23

Broadcast Stride Bright

high reach · clean systems · easy to read

You make the signal loud enough to travel. You create momentum by making things obvious. You like a steady rhythm that holds under pressure. You make progress feel dependable. You make the answer easy to read and repeat. You package complexity into shareable form.

SBTI vs MBTI

Similar format, different energy

A loose comparison drawn from the viral test format.

SBTI is 27 types and a punchier tone. MBTI is 16 types and a colder frame.

SBTI is built to travel in group chats. MBTI is built to sit in essays.

SBTI asks for instinct. MBTI asks for reflection.

SBTI gives you a poster. MBTI gives you a profile.

Most shared reaction

“I posted my result and the chat started arguing with the algorithm.”

That is the kind of sentence this site is trying to earn.

FAQ

The quick answers people ask after they see the card

What is SBTI?

SBTI stands for Silly Big Type Indicator. This site turns that idea into a playful, shareable personality test.

How many questions are there?

There are 31 quick prompts. That is long enough to feel specific and short enough to finish in one go.

How many types are there?

There are 27 types, built from three axes with three levels each. That gives the result space enough variety to stay interesting.

Is it free?

Yes. The site is free to take, and the result page is designed to be shared without a login.

Is this MBTI?

No. It borrows the viral test format, but the tone is looser, more social, and more internet-native.