On April 9th, an AI personality test application called "SBTI" quickly went viral on social media platforms with its absurd "abstract tags" and deconstructive expressions. The product directly targets traditional personality assessment tools like MBTI in terms of visual interface and naming logic, and openly claims that "MBTI is outdated." It replaces rigorous personality classifications with tags like "beautiful woman" and "ma lou," which carry a tone of self-mockery, accurately tapping into the aesthetic demands of current internet subcultures.

According to the public statement from SBTI developers, this product is not developed with a psychology background. Its core is not a rigorous statistical or psychological scale, but rather deeply integrated with AI generation technology for content creation. The developers admit that the interpretation of personality traits in the product may be vague or inaccurate. The core development logic is entertainment exploration rather than scientific evaluation, and they explicitly request users and relevant institutions not to use it for any commercial purposes.
The popularity of SBTI reflects that the application threshold of generative AI in the field of social entertainment is further decreasing. Although it lacks academic support, it successfully deconstructed traditional psychological measurement by leveraging AI-driven text generation capabilities and lightweight interaction design. The emergence of such a phenomenon-level product indicates that AI technology is transitioning from a productivity tool to emotional comfort and personalized social currency. However, it also once again raises discussions in the market about the rigor and ethical boundaries of AI assessment tools developed without professional backgrounds.



