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My Intelligence Type Test

Your Result

The Creative Spatial Architect

The Creative Spatial Architect - Test result image
0 participants0% rare

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A 3D blueprint is always running in your head. While others read the world in text, you imagine it in pictures and spaces — you're the kind of person who makes the invisible visible.

01 · Strength

Architect Strengths

• An outstanding ability to bring mental images into reality • A sharp sense of direction and spatial awareness — you never get lost anywhere • An innate aesthetic sense for color, arrangement, and harmony
02 · Weakness

Architect Weaknesses

• The vision in your head is so vivid that the gap with reality can be frustrating • You can be overly sensitive to things that aren't visually appealing, which may exhaust the people around you
03 · Advice

Advice for the Architect

This weekend, take a slow walk down a neighborhood alley you usually pass by and take 5 photos. You'll find fresh new angles even in familiar scenery.
Result Distribution
logicalThe Sharp Logical Analyst
0%
linguisticThe Eloquent Linguistic Maestro
0%
spatialThe Creative Spatial Architect
0%
interpersonalThe Warm Interpersonal Conductor
0%
introspectiveThe Deep Intrapersonal Philosopher
0%
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It shows which of the 6 intelligence domains (logical, linguistic, spatial, interpersonal, intrapersonal, naturalist) you most naturally express your abilities in. The result reflects your thinking style, problem-solving approach, and information-processing preferences. For example, the Logical Analyst is great at finding patterns and rules, while the Linguistic Maestro excels at communication and expression. Using your result as a reference can give you useful insights for exploring career options or setting personal development goals.
This test is designed based on Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences, but it's a self-exploration tool rather than a professional psychological assessment. Through 12 questions, it reflects your current tendencies and preferences, and over 80% of users report that they relate to their result. However, results can vary depending on your environment, experiences, and mood, so we recommend using it as one reference point for self-understanding. For serious career decisions, we suggest pairing it with a certified aptitude test.
Each type processes information and solves problems in fundamentally different ways. Logical types use data and rules; linguistic types use words and writing; spatial types use images and structures; interpersonal types thrive on human interaction; intrapersonal types rely on self-reflection; naturalist types understand the world through observation and classification. Your primary intelligence is the domain you express most naturally, and knowing the differences between types is a huge help for collaboration and communication.
Yes! You can share your result in various ways through the share buttons at the bottom of the results screen, including KakaoTalk, X (Twitter), and link copy. Comparing results with friends or family is a great opportunity to understand each other's strengths. Sharing results with teammates on a project can also give you hints about how to divide responsibilities. For example, having the logical type handle analysis while the linguistic type handles the presentation is something many teams say boosts efficiency significantly.
It can. Intelligence types aren't fixed — they can shift depending on your environment, experiences, and current interests. For example, if you've been reading a lot lately, your linguistic intelligence might score higher, and if you've started a new outdoor activity, your naturalist intelligence might come out on top. Professor Gardner himself emphasized that intelligence is developable, and educational research reports that engaging in a new activity for 6 weeks or more can activate related intelligence domains. Retaking the test after some time is a fun way to track your own growth and change.