MBTI Balance 아이콘

MBTI Balance

밸런스 게임

Solo MBTI Balance

Check your preference balance with 12 prompts

This mode compares everyday choices across the E/I, S/N, T/F, and J/P axes, then turns your answers into a concise shareable balance report.

12 balanced prompts
Axis strength summary
Sample tips for reflection

Sample result sections

  • MBTI type estimate and axis balance
  • Why your choices leaned that way
  • Lightweight recommendations for communication and habits

Related reading

How to use the result responsibly

The solo report is designed as a reflection aid. It translates repeated choices into MBTI preference signals, then explains which situations may have pulled you toward one side of an axis. Use it to notice habits, communication preferences, and decision patterns rather than to label yourself permanently.

  • Compare the axis percentages with your real-life choices from the past week.
  • Read the explanation before sharing the four-letter type.
  • Retake the flow when your context changes, such as work, school, or relationships.

If two answers both feel true, pick the one you would choose when tired or under time pressure. That usually reveals a stronger preference than the answer you would choose after long reflection. The result page highlights that tendency so you can decide whether it is helping you or limiting your options.

What the report does not claim

The result does not measure ability, mental health, or social value. It also does not say that one answer is better than another. The goal is to name a preference pattern clearly enough that you can decide when to lean into it and when to try a different response.

For a better reading, look for the axis with the strongest lean and ask what kind of situation produced that answer. A person can prefer planning in one context and flexibility in another, so the report should be read as a snapshot of this answer flow rather than a fixed identity.