Closest MBTI
ESFP / ISFP

The Drinker looks closest to ESFP / ISFP in the MBTI mirror
DRUNK is a hidden-trigger special personality. It means that on the "hobbies" question, you selected drinking-and even admitted that you pour baijiu into a thermos and drink it like water. The original reason SBTI was created was to persuade exactly this kind of friend to drink less. So what you received is not really a personality analysis. It is an intervention notice.
Closest MBTI
ESFP / ISFP
Why it feels close
DRUNK feels closest to ESFP / ISFP mainly along the Alcohol and escape line: social lubrication, solitary decompression, and hidden triggering consequences.
Biggest difference
The real split is not the label match itself, but the fact that SBTI and MBTI explain Alcohol and escape with different internal logic.
SBTI lens
DRUNK, a special personality that hides triggers - it means that you selected "drinking" in the "hobby" question and admitted that you poured liquor into a thermos cup and drank it as plain water. The original intention of the original creator of SBTI in conducting this test was to advise people like you to drink less. So what you get is not a personality reading, but an intervention notice.
MBTI lens
ESFP
ESFP's Se gives them a strong appetite for sensory stimulation, and alcohol is one of the easiest forms to access. Their overlap with DRUNK lies in their relationship with the immediacy of experience.
The difference is that ESFP drinking is often socially driven. They drink more happily around people, and seem to release more fully afterward. DRUNK is triggered by "baijiu in a thermos as if it were plain water." That is not party behavior. That is daily-life behavior.
ESFP is a party drinker. DRUNK is a lifestyle drinker. Those are two very different things.
If you are DRUNK + ESFP, you may be the soul of every gathering, but you also drink when alone at home. That distinction matters. Alcohol in a social setting can act like lubricant. Alcohol in solitude may be functioning more like painkiller. So what pain is it numbing?
ISFP
ISFP's Fi makes emotional experience very deep-sometimes deep enough that it becomes hard to bear without help from something external. For ISFP, alcohol may not be about stimulation at all. It may function more like a pressure valve.
That makes the overlap with DRUNK more private. It is not about public celebration. It is about self-adjustment inside one's own world.
If you are DRUNK + ISFP, you probably drink quietly. Not to get wild, but to make the voices in your head turn down a little. You know it is not the best method. You also know it may be the fastest method you currently have. This is not a solution. It is a temporary bandage.
Dimension translation
This section handles the same outer behavior and explains why SBTI and MBTI may read it as two completely different inner motivations.
| Collision point | SBTI says | MBTI says | In plain English |
|---|---|---|---|
| Special trigger | DRUNK is a forced result: no matter what the other dimensions say, "baijiu in a thermos" makes you DRUNK | MBTI has no mechanism for evaluating drinking habits | This is one of SBTI's most serious design choices. The creator was not joking. DRUNK is the only type in the whole system where one behavior overrides everything else-because a lot of other things can be joked about, but health cannot. |
| Real personality | DRUNK covers over your underlying 15-dimensional profile | MBTI type is not altered by habits | Under the DRUNK label there is still a "real you"-maybe CTRL, maybe MALO, maybe something else entirely. But alcohol acts like frosted glass between you and that person. Drink a little less, and perhaps you will see more clearly. |
| Escape vs enjoyment | SBTI does not judge, but offers a framework | ESFP: more enjoyment-based; ISFP: more escape-based | Are you drinking for addition-making good experiences better-or subtraction-making bad experiences less painful? The first is enjoyment. The second is a signal. You already know which one applies to you. |
Soul check
Question 1
The original creator made SBTI to get a friend to drink less. You got the type designed specifically for that friend. You know better than I do what that means.
Question 2
What are you like when you do not drink? This is not asking whether you can stop. It is asking what changes when alcohol is absent: your feelings, your thoughts, your social style, your emotional tone. If the difference is large, alcohol has already become more than a beverage.
Question 3
Would you be willing to take the test again, but this time not choose drinking as a hobby? See what your "real personality" comes out as. You may discover that the version of you without the alcohol filter is far more interesting than you expected.