Beantworte 10 Fragen und entdecke, welcher Gott oder welche Göttin der Weltmythologie dein tiefstes Wesen widerspiegelt.
Die Götter beraten…
Olymp, Asgard und das Jenseits antworten
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The mythological deity test offers a symbolic exploration of your profile through the divine figures of the great ancient pantheons. Based on your answers, the app identifies the deity that best resonates with your relationship with the world, among the Greek figures (Zeus, Athena, Apollo, Artemis, Aphrodite, Dionysus, Hermes), Egyptian (Isis, Thoth, Anubis, Bastet), and Norse (Odin, Freyja, Thor, Loki). Each deity carries a domain, a founding tale, and a set of symbolic qualities. This is a tool of mythological introspection, with no diagnostic or religious prescription value.
The Greek pantheon, set down by Homer (8th century BCE) and Hesiod in the Theogony, organizes the twelve Olympians around Zeus and embodies each facet of human experience. The Egyptian pantheon, attested as early as the 3rd millennium BCE, brings together Isis, Osiris, Horus, Thoth, Anubis, Bastet, and Ra, tied to the cycle of the Nile, death, and resurrection. The Norse pantheon, transmitted by the Icelandic Eddas (13th century) compiled by Snorri Sturluson, articulates the Aesir (Odin, Thor, Freyr, Tyr, Loki) and the Vanir (Freyja, Njörd) in a warrior and magical cosmology. The test offers correspondences between your profile and one of these figures.
The questionnaire has about twenty multiple-choice questions on your values, relationship with power, knowledge, beauty, combat, or mystery. Each answer is weighted and distributes points across several deities at once, since one trait can map to neighboring figures in different pantheons (for example Athena and Thoth for wisdom). The app then computes your dominant deity and a secondary deity that nuances the profile. You receive a sheet covering the central myth, attributes, associated animals and plants, as well as the shadow zones traditionally tied to the figure.
Treat the deity obtained as a symbolic figure, not a religious identification. Read the central myth before the attributes: it is in the tale that the embodied quality reveals itself. Apollo is not only light, he also carries distance and rigor. Compare the dominant deity with the secondary to grasp the tension that drives your profile. If the figure obtained belongs to a pantheon you know little, take time to consult a reference source such as Edith Hamilton's Mythology or the works of Jean-Pierre Vernant.
No. It is a tool of mythological introspection. The figures are used as cultural and symbolic markers, with no spiritual commitment or adherence to a cult. You can take the test whatever your personal religious or philosophical tradition.
Because divine figures echo from one culture to another without overlapping exactly. Athena and Isis share wisdom, but on different registers. The test offers a broader range to provide a finer match than restriction to a single pantheon would allow.
Yes, and it is often an opportunity for discovery. The sheet provided presents the myth and the essential attributes. If the figure intrigues you, reference works such as those of Walter Burkert for Greece or Régis Boyer for Scandinavia allow you to go further.
Indirectly. Western astrology derives in part from the Greco-Roman pantheon (Mars, Venus, Mercury, Jupiter). A correspondence is therefore possible but not systematic, because the test measures self-perception, which does not exactly match planetary positions.