How to Get SBTI SHIT (The Bitter World-Saver) on the Test
Want to land the The Bitter World-Saver type on your SBTI result? Here's exactly which traits to lean into, what kinds of answers produce SHIT, and what to avoid. Works for anyone trying to get SHIT deliberately — or avoid it.
The Short Answer
You likely answered negatively to questions about blind optimism and unquestioning trust in authority. You also probably expressed a strong desire to help others and a willingness to take responsibility, even when things seem hopeless. Basically, you're the opposite of a naive optimist.
Step 1: Emphasize these core traits
The SBTI test maps your answers across 15 dimensions. To get SHIT, your responses should consistently signal:
- 1Cynical
- 2Responsible
- 3Idealistic (underneath)
- 4Sarcastic
- 5Empathetic
- 6Independent
Step 2: Answer patterns to aim for
✓ you find yourself constantly volunteering, even though you complain about it the entire time
✓ you have a carefully curated list of charities you actually trust
✓ you're the 'realist' in your friend group, but secretly hope you're wrong
✓ you have strong opinions about ethics in [your field]
✓ your humor is mostly sarcastic observations about the state of the world
✓ you're exhausted, but you keep going
Step 3: What to avoid
If you keep ending up on BOSS / FAKE instead of SHIT, your answers are tilting toward those archetypes. Specifically avoid:
- ✗ Over-emphasizing burnout
- ✗ Over-emphasizing cynicism
- ✗ Over-emphasizing perfectionism
- ✗ Over-emphasizing pessimism
- ✗ Over-emphasizing overthinking
- ✗ Over-emphasizing difficulty relaxing
Already Got SHIT? Here's What It Means
Saving the world, one eye-roll at a time. — the The Bitter World-Saver type is defined by cynical surface, responsible core, disillusioned but still trying. Read the full profile to see your traits, strengths, weaknesses, and compatible matches.
Read SBTI SHIT full profileIs 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.