Quiz architect. BuzzFeed refugee. Chronic over-thinker who turned her personality obsession into an actual website.
I've spent an embarrassing amount of time on personality quizzes. Like, genuinely embarrassing. Myers-Briggs, Enneagram, "Which Hogwarts house are you" — I took them all, shared every result, and then spent 20 minutes on TikTok explaining why my result was 100% accurate. The problem? Every quiz site had the same problem: ads. So many ads. So I built my own. You're welcome.
I loved you. I really did. But you hurt me, and now I've built a competitor. Here, for the record, are your crimes.
Pop-ups. Auto-play video ads. Banner ads between every single question. I once had to dismiss four ads to find out I'm a "Hufflepuff who eats cereal for dinner." Unacceptable.
If patience is a virtue, BuzzFeed made us all saints. Their quiz pages load like they're being served over a dial-up modem from 2003.
"Which Friends character are you?" Yes. Still. In 2025. For the seventeenth time. New content, who dis?
I answered 15 questions about my food preferences and I couldn't even read what type of pasta I am because an ad for mattresses blocked it. A mattress ad. Really.
You mean I took "What city should you live in" for the fifth time and you don't even remember me? I'm hurt. Genuinely.
I got "You're a calm, collected morning person" on a quiz I took at 2am eating cold pizza. The algorithm and I have very different definitions of "you."
" "I'm just going to build one quiz. How hard can it be?" — Me, six months and one AI engine later.
It started the way most great disasters do: with a very reasonable idea that spiralled completely out of control. I wanted one clean quiz site. No ads. Fast. Funny. With results that actually felt personal instead of copy-pasted from a horoscope generator from 2009.
Then I discovered I could wire up an actual AI to write the quizzes. Then I found out I could make it generate illustrations for your results. Then there was a "The Basement" for archived quizzes, a "The Drop" that auto-generates fresh quizzes every Monday, saved history, favourites, a "You vs. The World" stats section after results...
Somewhere around the fourth consecutive weekend where I forgot to eat a real meal, QuizMe became a real thing. Not just a quiz site — a full-stack personality playground powered by AI, built by someone who is herself definitely a Type A with chaotic-neutral tendencies and too many browser tabs open at all times.
The result? A quiz site that's actually fun to use. No ads. No bloat. Just sharp, funny, AI-generated quizzes — with a different cartoon illustration every time you get a result — that tell you things about yourself you didn't know you needed to hear. And sometimes, things you definitely didn't need to hear but couldn't look away from.
Welcome to QuizMe. I'm Sara. I built this for us. 🔥
If I put myself through my own quiz engine, this is exactly the result I'd get. (I checked. It tracks.)
Three quizzes, randomly selected by the algorithm. Which honestly might tell you more about you than you'd like.
Have a quiz idea? An extremely specific niche you need explored?
Something you've always wondered about yourself but BuzzFeed never covered?
Tell me. I'll build it. The AI does the heavy lifting anyway.
No guarantee of response time. I operate on a "when I see it" email schedule. Very professional.