Lee Jang-Hyun نوع شخصية MBTI
شخصية
"ما نوع الشخصية Lee Jang-Hyun؟ Lee Jang-Hyun هو نوع ENTP في mbti ، 7w8 - SP7 - 259 في enneagram ، في Big 5 ، في Socionics."
"You can call me crazy, but this character isn’t written according to any MBTI stack that can coherently explain his actions." 1. Political aspect (Ni–Te–Fi): Hyun shows a clear strategic vision whenever he participates in political discussions or debates strategies. He never throws out multiple possibilities like an Ne-user would — instead, he focuses on one plan, one method, backed by specific historical analogies (for example, analyzing what the “barbarians” might do based on past events). He suggests besieging the city, believes the island is the safest place, and tells the female lead Gil-Chae to take refuge there. Essentially, the political storyline in Part 1 is driven by this singular, Ni-Te style vision. But this is where the writer went overboard — by giving him too much competence, they completely broke the consistency of his supposed cognitive stack. 2. Debate moments: There are only a few, and they resemble ENTP stereotypes, but throughout the story there’s no consistent display of Ne at all — apart from that “sound of pollen” concept. If he were really Ne-dom, then Si would be inferior, but the way he’s written shows no sign of Si-inferior behavior whatsoever. Whoever else is convinced, I’m not. 3. Contradictions in decision-making: Even though the character is written as hyper-competent, he often makes choices that make no sense for an Ne-dom — he doesn’t test multiple outcomes, he picks one path and charges ahead. Don’t believe me? Here’s an example: “I thought you’d get bored of me once you truly had me — that’s why I became the man you could never completely have.” The dramatic escape at the end of Part 1 is absurd: he has wealth, power, and intellect, yet instead of planning a realistic route for the female lead (who doesn’t trust him), he impulsively says “let’s run away.” In Part 2 it gets worse — he’s portrayed as a clever, resourceful merchant, yet whenever there’s a fight, he recklessly jumps into 1-vs-10 battles just to look perfect. And these aren’t surprise situations — he knows the danger beforehand, but still dives in without a plan. Whoever enjoys that kind of character design, I honestly can’t. If he’s that perfect, then why not come up with a better plan? Anyway, long story short — I just don’t find the supposed ENTP stack convincing at all from start to finish. This character isn’t an ENTP written badly — it’s an INTJ wearing an ENTP mask because the writer wanted him to be witty and prophetic at the same time.