Answer based on your natural instincts, not how you think you should respond. There are no right or wrong answers β each response helps us match you with the perfect Filipino dish and K-Pop/K-Drama character twin.
Extraversion (E) vs Introversion (I): How you recharge your energy β through social interaction or quiet reflection.
Sensing (S) vs Intuition (N): How you process information β through concrete facts or abstract patterns.
Thinking (T) vs Feeling (F): How you make decisions β through logic and analysis or values and empathy.
Judging (J) vs Perceiving (P): How you approach life β with structure and planning or flexibility and spontaneity.
The Pinoy Food Personality Test uses a 16-question format based on the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) framework. Each question is answered on a four-point scale: Super Agree, Agree, Disagree, or Super Disagree. Your answers are scored across four personality dimensions β Extraversion vs. Introversion, Sensing vs. Intuition, Thinking vs. Feeling, and Judging vs. Perceiving β and the combination of your four dimension results produces one of 16 MBTI types. That type is then matched to an iconic Filipino dish whose character mirrors the personality.
Questions are randomly drawn from a pool of 48, so the quiz feels fresh each time you take it. The four-point scale (rather than a simple agree/disagree) allows for stronger signal when you have a strong preference and softer signal when you're on the fence β which tends to produce more accurate results than binary choices.
Four questions per dimension is the minimum needed to distinguish genuine preference from random variation, while keeping the total test short enough to complete in under five minutes. Each dimension gets an equal number of questions, so no single axis of personality dominates the outcome. If you have a very strong preference on one dimension and are genuinely split on another, those differences will show up appropriately in your result.
We also built in a question bank of 48 total questions (12 per dimension) so that repeat test-takers get a different experience each time. If you've taken the quiz before and gotten a result that didn't feel right, the randomized question selection means trying again with a fresh set of questions is genuinely useful, not just the same test re-run.
Your result page includes five things: your MBTI type, the Filipino dish that matches your personality, a detailed explanation of why that match works, your K-Pop and K-Drama character twin, and a daily mission β a small, personality-specific challenge that connects your type to Filipino food culture in a practical way. The results are designed to be shareable and are optimized for social media with custom preview images for each of the 16 types.
The 16 dishes covered in this test represent the full range of Filipino culinary culture. You might get Adobo (the reliable classic), Halo-Halo (the creative explosion), Balut (the curious thinker's food), Sinigang (the comforting soul food), Lechon (the festive centerpiece), or any of the other 11 dishes β each chosen because its character as a food genuinely mirrors the personality type it's matched with.
Every answer you give is processed entirely in your browser. No data is sent to any server, and your individual question responses are never stored anywhere. The only thing that gets saved is your final MBTI result β stored locally on your own device so that the site can remember your result if you visit again. You can clear this at any time by clearing your browser's local storage. Full details are in our Privacy Policy.
If you want to see what kind of results the test produces before taking it, you can browse the Food Guide for an overview of all 16 Filipino dish personalities, or visit any of the individual result pages directly. Knowing what's possible doesn't affect your quiz outcome β the questions don't ask about food directly, so exploring the result pages won't bias your answers. Think of it as a preview of the 16 flavors of Filipino personality.