Cheat Guide

How to Get SBTI OH-NO (The Disaster Preventer) on the Test

Want to land the The Disaster Preventer type on your SBTI result? Here's exactly which traits to lean into, what kinds of answers produce OH-NO, and what to avoid. Works for anyone trying to get OH-NO deliberately — or avoid it.

The Short Answer

You likely answered affirmatively to questions about planning, risk aversion, and responsibility. High scores on caution and conscientiousness, combined with lower scores on spontaneity and impulsivity, will land you firmly in OH-NO territory.

Step 1: Emphasize these core traits

The SBTI test maps your answers across 15 dimensions. To get OH-NO, your responses should consistently signal:

  • 1
    Cautious
  • 2
    Prepared
  • 3
    Responsible
  • 4
    Analytical
  • 5
    Observant
  • 6
    Boundary-Setting

Step 2: Answer patterns to aim for

You have a dedicated emergency kit (or several).

You frequently say, "What if…?"

You're the designated driver, always.

You secretly judge people who don't wear sunscreen.

You have a spreadsheet for everything.

You've already considered the worst-case scenario.

Step 3: What to avoid

If you keep ending up on FUCK / GOGO instead of OH-NO, your answers are tilting toward those archetypes. Specifically avoid:

  • Over-emphasizing overthinking
  • Over-emphasizing anxiety
  • Over-emphasizing pessimism
  • Over-emphasizing difficulty relaxing
  • Over-emphasizing judgmental tendencies
  • Over-emphasizing micromanagement

Already Got OH-NO? Here's What It Means

Always prepared. Probably overprepared. Definitely judging your life choices. — the The Disaster Preventer type is defined by risk awareness, caution, prevention, foresight, boundary-setting. Read the full profile to see your traits, strengths, weaknesses, and compatible matches.

Read SBTI OH-NO full profile

Is it OK to game the SBTI test?

SBTI is entertainment, not a clinical assessment. Plenty of people retake it to see different results, unlock the hidden DRUNK type, or land the label their friends got. There's no ethical issue with steering your answers — the test makers built it as a meme, not a diagnostic. Just remember: the most interesting result is usually the one you get when you answer honestly first time.

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