There's better versions of this test out there, even for free, but it's still fun.
On nearly every other version of the test I've taken(We did it on a lot of websites for Psych, though lol using websites as the basis) I'm an INTJ. Yet oddly, This came out as ISTJ.
"You try to respond to your e-mails as soon as possible and cannot stand a messy inbox." This is evil, they've put 2 questions in the same question and I have 2 different answers, No i don't respond to emails asap, and Yes I cannot stand a messy inbox :s
"You find it easy to stay relaxed and focused even when there is some pressure." too vauge, as it depends on the situation I'm in.
"You rarely get mood swings." "Your mood can change very quickly." Aren't these just asking the same thing with different answers?
http://www.16persona...nfp-personality
This... doesn't sound like me at all. It's got some things right but a lot of it is vague and you could decribe most people the same way.
That's kind of the point of the Meyers-Briggs test in a sense. There's only(In 99% of the tests I've seen) 16 possible outcomes. It tends to paint a large brush. It's useful for some instances(Like understanding how someone thinks at moments) but the smallest group is INTJ, which is still 1% of the population on average.
To put it in semi-comparable way, it's akin to the Dungeons and Dragons Allignment chart, where because there's X options, each option can be overly vague/not describing you, because it's trying to describe all the people who kind of think like you.
Edited by Bill Cipher, 24 May 2015 - 10:03 PM.
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