Share Your Type
Every SBTI result page has its own URL. Copy it and send it to someone who knows you — see if they agree with the description.
SBTI MALO · SBTI Type
Civilized society never fully tamed the monkey bouncing around in your head.
MALO MALO types are playful, jumpy, and not very interested in how things are "supposed" to be. Your brain always has a weird idea in it — and that's often your most lovable part.
How you scored across all 15 SBTI behavioral dimensions.
Your confidence rises and falls with your state.
You often feel unclear about 'who you actually are.'
Growth, goals, or beliefs pull you forward naturally.
You oscillate between trusting and testing.
Once you've decided, you go full-in — seriously and completely.
You want closeness and also want to keep some personal space.
You're not naive, but you're not full conspiracy mode either.
Freedom and comfort often outrank rules for you.
You want to know where you're going — direction matters.
Sometimes you want to win, sometimes you just want fewer problems.
You tend to loop in your head a lot before deciding.
Things not done make you uncomfortable — you push them forward.
Being proactively social requires some build-up energy for you.
You calibrate distance based on the person.
You're skilled at switching how you express yourself based on context.
A type is a behavioral map — not a fixed identity.
Your SBTI result shows how your behaviors cluster across 15 dimensions — how you tend to operate, not how you must. The pattern is calculated from your answers. The interpretation is yours.
There's no best or worst SBTI type. High scores on self-esteem stability aren't better than low ones — they're different operating modes. Your result shows where you sit in the behavioral space, not how you compare to others.
What most people explore next.
Every SBTI result page has its own URL. Copy it and send it to someone who knows you — see if they agree with the description.
Scroll to the dimension section. The H/M/L scores across all 15 dimensions often reveal more than the type name alone.
SBTI results can shift with context and mood. If the type description feels off, take the test again — answers change, and so do results.
RFTI maps your relationship behavioral patterns specifically — attachment, trust, emotional investment. It's a different lens on the same person.
Have a close friend or partner take the SBTI test. See if their result matches how they see themselves — or challenges it.
Browse all 27 SBTI types to see where your type sits — which types are behaviorally close to yours, and which are the furthest away.
Three honest uses.
The type name is a label. The 15-dimension H/M/L breakdown is the actual data. Look for dimensions that feel accurate — and ones that surprise you. The pattern often says more than the name.
SBTI maps your general behavioral personality across 5 models. RFTI maps specifically how you operate in close relationships. Same person — different behavioral layer.
RFTI has 15 questions and takes about 5 minutes.
Your SBTI result page has its own URL — share it with someone who knows you well. If the result doesn't feel accurate, take the test again. Results can and do shift with context.
Send your result to a close friend and ask if they agree. Their reaction is often more informative than your own.
See all SBTI typesCommon questions after getting an SBTI result.
It means the monkey in your head still bounces—playful, jumpy, not very invested in how things are "supposed" to be. The weird ideas are often your most lovable part.
Channel wild ideas into small, reversible experiments instead of trying to flip every table. Your chaos needs a container to become creation.
Content, games, ads, new media—any lane that rewards weird angles and breaks rules gently. Repetitive, rigid hierarchies wilt you fast.
Retake the SBTI test for a fresh result, or try RFTI to see how your behavioral patterns show up in relationships.
Both tests are free · No account required · Full results instantly