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Joseon Dynasty Survival Type Test

Your Result

Master of Reading the Room — "The Royal Secretary"

Master of Reading the Room — "The Royal Secretary" - Test result image
0 participants0% rare

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"Your Majesty's will is most wise." You are a master of social navigation — a human scanner! You read any situation faster than anyone and have razor-sharp social awareness, which means you adapt quickly and survive wherever you go.

01 · Strength

The Royal Secretary's Strengths

• Razor-sharp social awareness that reads any situation faster than anyone • Exceptional mediation skills that resolve conflicts peacefully • Delicate consideration and intuition perfectly optimized for group life
02 · Weakness

The Royal Secretary's Weaknesses

• Can get so caught up in reading others that you neglect your own feelings • Can come across as having no opinions of your own
03 · Advice

Advice for the Royal Secretary

Just for today, try honestly saying "I like this." Taking care of yourself as much as you take care of others is the real art of navigating life!
Result Distribution
type_kingSupreme Ruler — "The King"
0%
type_scholarUnyielding Principles — "The Scholar"
0%
type_idlerJoseon's Hipster — "The Idler"
0%
type_secretaryMaster of Reading the Room — "The Royal Secretary"
0%
type_merchantBorn to Be a Tycoon — "The Grand Merchant"
0%
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This shows the social status that best matches your personality and values if you time-slipped to the Joseon Dynasty. Your choices across 12 historical scenarios are comprehensively analyzed, and the status with the highest score among the 6 types — King, Scholar, Idler, Royal Secretary, Merchant, and Royal Guard — becomes your result. Each result includes a personality interpretation through your Joseon status, modern-day strengths and weaknesses, tailored advice, and which statuses you're most compatible with. For example, getting King means you're a modern-day Leader type, while Idler corresponds to a free-spirited Artist type.
This test is an entertainment test that creatively applies Enneagram personality theory to Joseon Dynasty social statuses, and is not a professional psychological diagnostic tool. However, it is designed to measure various personality dimensions across 12 questions — including leadership, judgment, sociability, and crisis response — and many people find the results surprisingly aligned with their actual personality. The unique frame of historical scenarios actually tends to draw out more honest answers.
Each of the 6 statuses has a distinct core value and behavioral pattern. The King represents charisma and decisiveness, the Scholar represents wisdom and principle, the Idler represents freedom and artistry, the Royal Secretary represents social awareness and mediation, the Merchant represents networking and business acumen, and the Royal Guard represents loyalty and martial skill. Interestingly, these traits map directly onto modern roles — leader, researcher, free spirit, mediator, entrepreneur, and expert. Check out the compatibility info to see which status combinations create great synergy and which ones to watch out for.
Yes! You can easily share via KakaoTalk, X (Twitter), link copy, and more using the share button at the bottom of the results screen. Friends can start the test right away through the shared link. This test is especially great for sparking conversations with friends — "Are you a King? I'm an Idler lol" — and checking compatibility results adds even more fun as you discover your Joseon-era chemistry. The result card, which includes each status's core personality and modern interpretation, is also perfect for posting on social media.
If you answer honestly, you'll generally get the same or similar result. However, some answers may shift depending on recent experiences or your current mood, which can lead to subtle differences. This is because people's behavioral tendencies do change slightly based on their environment and experiences. Enneagram theory also holds that while your core type remains consistent, traits from other types can emerge depending on the situation. Retaking the test a few months later can be a great opportunity to reflect on your growth and changes in a fun way.