Guide · RPG
What D&D class am I?
Huesona isn’t affiliated with Dungeons & Dragons or Wizards of the Coast, and it won’t hand you one of their classes. But the itch behind the question is real: you want a fantasy identity that fits how you actually think, decide, and show up. Here’s what an original, Big Five–grounded RPG quiz does instead — and why an honest system beats a knock-off of someone else’s.
The honest short answer
Huesona won’t tell you that you’re a D&D barbarian or a wizard, because Huesona isn’t Dungeons & Dragons and doesn’t use its class list. What it does is read your personality and match you to one of twelve original character classes— the Strategist, the Guardian, the Healer, the Oracle, and so on — each defined by a pattern of measured traits rather than a playstyle you pick.
If what you actually want is “a fantasy version of me, based on who I really am,” that’s exactly the question this quiz answers — just with its own system instead of borrowing someone else’s.
Why we don’t just copy the D&D classes
Two reasons, and they point the same way. First, the classes and mechanics of Dungeons & Dragons are the trademarked, creative work of Wizards of the Coast — not ours to reproduce and rename. Second, and more to the point: a clone would be a worse quiz. Copying a fighter/rogue/cleric list and stapling it to a personality test would just dress up someone else’s game as if it measured you.
The broad fantasy roles — the warrior, the mage, the healer, the scout — are shared genre vocabulary that no one owns; they show up in myth and in every RPG. Huesona uses that familiar grammar, then builds its own classes on top of trait science, so the result reflects your answers, not a franchise.
What actually decides your class here
In a tabletop game you choose a class for how you want to play. Huesona runs the other way: your class is derived from how you answer. Your 49 responses become thirteen trait dimensions, each scored 0–100 — grounded in the public-domain Big Five (IPIP) — and every class has a small signature of defining traits your pattern is matched against. Same answers, same class, every time; the exact machinery is in how scoring works.
That’s the honest edge over “pick the class that sounds cool”: it reads you — your focus, drive, warmth, and appetite for novelty — not the character you’d role-play. The science backs the trait dimensions; the class name on top is a playful interpretation, never a diagnosis, and we say which is which on every result.
So — what class are you?
The only way to find out is to answer honestly and see where your pattern lands. You’ll get a main class and subclass, an element that tints it, a stat card, and a shareable result — free, no account, about five minutes. Not a D&D class — but a fantasy identity your actual answers point to, rather than one you picked.
Common questions
Can this quiz tell me what D&D class I am?
Not literally — Huesona isn't affiliated with Dungeons & Dragons and doesn't assign its classes. Instead it reads your personality and matches you to one of twelve original character classes, each defined by a measured trait pattern. If the real question is 'what fantasy class fits who I am?', that's exactly what it answers.
Is Huesona affiliated with Dungeons & Dragons or Wizards of the Coast?
No. Huesona is an independent quiz with its own original classes, questions, and scoring. Dungeons & Dragons and D&D are trademarks of Wizards of the Coast; we mention them only to be clear about what Huesona is not, and to answer a question people genuinely search for.
Why not just use the D&D classes?
Two reasons: their class system is trademarked creative work that isn't ours to copy, and a clone would be a worse quiz anyway — it would dress up someone else's game as if it measured you. The generic fantasy roles (warrior, mage, healer, scout) are shared genre vocabulary; Huesona uses that familiar grammar but builds its own classes on top of Big Five trait science.
What's the difference between a D&D class and a Huesona class?
A D&D class is a playstyle you choose for a game. A Huesona class is derived from your answers — a mirror of your measured trait pattern, not a role you pick. Different jobs: one is for playing a character, the other is a playful, honest read of who you already are.
References
- Goldberg, L. R. (1999). A broad-bandwidth, public-domain, personality inventory measuring the lower-level facets of several five-factor models. In I. Mervielde, I. Deary, F. De Fruyt, & F. Ostendorf (Eds.), Personality Psychology in Europe (Vol. 7, pp. 7–28). Tilburg University Press. (The public-domain IPIP item pool Huesona’s questions draw on.)
- John, O. P., & Srivastava, S. (1999). The Big Five trait taxonomy: History, measurement, and theoretical perspectives. In L. A. Pervin & O. P. John (Eds.), Handbook of Personality: Theory and Research (2nd ed., pp. 102–138). Guilford Press.
Last updated July 5, 2026.
A playful interpretation of your trait pattern, for self-reflection and communication. Not a clinical diagnosis, hiring assessment, medical tool, or therapy replacement.