First, the verdict
Congratulations: you got SOLO, the type that wants closeness and fears it at the exact same time. This is the personality that often keeps one hand on the door even while hoping someone will stay. Low self-worth can make you pull away before anybody else gets the chance to disappoint you. So instead of saying “please do not leave,” you build a whole emotional wall and call it independence. It looks prickly from the outside, but underneath the armor there is usually somebody who feels everything very intensely and is just tired of getting hurt first.
How this reads in the upgraded SBTI
Seen through the lens of SBTI Personality Test: Upgraded Edition , SOLO feels less like a fixed label and more like the kind of online archetype that keeps showing up in everyday life. It’s not that you don’t want to connect with others; it’s simply that you’ve grown all too familiar with disappointment and unmet expectations. So before you even take a step closer, your body instinctively pulls back. You don’t have to embody this persona every single moment, but as soon as you find yourself in a situation that feels just right, your well-worn patterns of behavior, tone of voice, emotional responses, and social cues will kick in on their own. You might deny it outright—or even crack a dismissive “Bullshit!” when the outcome becomes clear—but after watching how you react, most people will quietly nod: Yeah, that’s exactly it.
The whole difference between the upgraded version and a standard meme quiz is that it does not stop at giving you a label. It tries to press that label deeper into real life. How do you move closer or pull back in relationships? When things get chaotic, do you want to grab the wheel? Do you doubt the world first, or do you trust people first? Are you the type who curses while getting things done, or the type who smiles while hiding what you really feel? Most of the time, a result stings not because it is scientific, but because it drags out the part of you that you usually cannot be bothered to admit, together with your internet vibe, your time-and-place context, and your everyday habits.
When this type is at its best
- You have a genuine need for connection, and you’re also very sensitive about it.
- You’re very attuned to shifts in your position within the relationship.
- When it comes to genuine care, you’re not at all frivolous; on the contrary, you take it very seriously.
How this type goes off the rails
- When we fear getting hurt, it’s easy to withdraw from others first.
- Sometimes, when you “take a step back,” it ends up meaning you just “don’t show up at all.”
- If others are unstable, you’re easily triggered and your old wounds can resurface.
Who this type clicks with
You’re best suited to building connections with someone who is consistent, stable, and willing to come back to you. You don’t need a dramatic, whirlwind romance; what you need is reliability—someone who won’t just disappear.
One-line verdict
If you get this result, do not rush to treat it like a life sentence. It is closer to a meme screenshot that happened to capture one especially stable, flavorful, and memorable side of you.

