Are you Lawful Good or Chaotic Evil? Take the ultimate D&D Alignment Test to discover your true moral personality archetype. Find your place on the chart now!
Are you a noble Crusader, a rebellious Free Spirit, or a calculating Mastermind? The D&D Alignment Chart has moved beyond the tabletop—it is now the internet's favorite personality test.
In a world of endless personality quizzes, from MBTI to Zodiac signs, there is one system that cuts through the noise to answer the most fundamental question of all: Where do you stand between Law and Chaos, Good and Evil?
The D&D Alignment Test was originally designed for creating fantasy characters in Dungeons & Dragons, but it has evolved into a viral cultural phenomenon. It doesn't just tell you what "aesthetic" you have; it reveals your moral philosophy. It explains why you meticulously organize your apps (Lawful) or why you jaywalk just to feel something (Chaotic). It explains why you always play the healer (Good) or why you root for the villain (Evil).
Ready to find out where you truly belong on the grid?
While Dungeons & Dragons has been around since the 1970s, the "Alignment Chart" meme has taken on a life of its own. You've seen them on social media: 3x3 grids categorizing everything from The Office characters to types of bread.
Why are we so obsessed with this specific test? Unlike other personality frameworks that focus on how you act (introvert vs. extrovert), the D&D Alignment Test focuses on why you act. It measures your Ethics (Law vs. Chaos) and your Morality (Good vs. Evil).
This isn't a math test, and there are no wrong answers (though being Chaotic Evil might make you a questionable roommate). To get the most accurate result:
You will love this test if:
Our algorithm maps your answers to one of the nine distinct sectors of the alignment grid. Here is a preview of who you might be:
This quiz is designed for entertainment and self-discovery purposes. While based on the popular role-playing game mechanics and Jungian archetypes, it is not a clinical psychological evaluation. "Evil" alignments refer to game mechanics (self-interest), not actual criminal morality.
You are the 'Mom Friend' of the group, and frankly, everyone would be dead without you.
You are too pure for this world, and we must protect you at all costs.
Rules are just suggestions, and you have some edits.
I don't make the rules, I just enforce them... and I love it.
Not my circus, not my monkeys.
I’m not crazy, I’m just violently allergic to boredom.
I’m going to take over the world, but I’ll have the paperwork to prove I own it.
I look out for Number One.
Some men just want to watch the world burn.