Solar
Focus and drive show up most during daylight.
Bundle thinking and tasks from morning to early afternoon, keep the evening for rest.
Plans and routines feel more stable when set on a daytime baseline.
When you're settled, that's when you feel most like yourself.

SCRB
The planner who attacks with form.
The Formatter is a style whose true strength comes out the more there is a "fixed shape" to daily life.
Preparing in the same order each morning, keeping the same layout on the desk, mapping out the schedule in advance — small bits of order like these reduce the noise in your head and make things noticeably lighter to carry.
The opposite is true too. When sudden plan changes pile up, when the rules keep shifting, or when communication stays vague, the mind gets worn down even before the body does. That's not nervousness — it's that when the foundation of safety crumbles, the cost of processing everything spikes. For a Formatter, "things being in order" is not a luxury; it's closer to being able to breathe.
People say "too detailed," but
you just want a state where you can be at ease — you don't want to do things half-heartedly.
Strengths
Weaknesses
Formatters are often seen as "tidy" or "serious," and sometimes misread as "too detailed" or "inflexible."
The truth is, you don't want to nitpick. You just want a state where you can be at ease. It's not that you can't have fun, or that you're cold — you just don't want to handle things halfway. You order things because you want to face people, time and promises properly.
When others lean on you, you often get praised as "the one who keeps things stable." Not flashy single shots — the power to build days that don't fall apart. That's hard to spot, but in everyday life it's a high-value strength. The calmer those around you look, the more often you've been quietly putting things in order behind the scenes.
The wish to "set things in order" is not narrowness — it's kindness. It's a sense that protects you, and at the same time it's a force that gives others peace of mind. Holding onto care in a slapdash world is not easy.
Tell a friend about this style
Solar
Focus and drive show up most during daylight.
Bundle thinking and tasks from morning to early afternoon, keep the evening for rest.
Plans and routines feel more stable when set on a daytime baseline.
Compact
Wants life built around the essentials.
Trimming things, plans, and people sharpens focus.
Overloading leads to exhaustion.
Routine
Performs best when the flow is set in advance.
Routines remove decisions and bring stability.
Heavy schedule swings cause stress.
Build
Wants to build their own systems and environment.
Tinkering and customising rarely feels stressful.
More freedom leads to more satisfaction.
Tools that turn life into data work well: digital calendars for detailed scheduling, habit-tracking apps for monitoring progress, and budgeting apps for tracking spending.
Setting aside regular review time to revisit plans and surface improvements helps build a more efficient system. Checklists for reliable task progress also pair well.
Investing in mechanisms that reduce daily decision cost — automated routines, subscription services, organized storage systems — makes life noticeably more stable.
Tap anything that catches your eye and explore at your own pace.
Explore styles that share something with yours — or ones that see the world completely differently.
SCRU
Cycles a proven format to deliver results without waste.
SCFB
Catches the smallest friction and tunes it on the fly.
SCFU
Rolls with schedule changes without losing balance.
LEFU
Moves forward on stimulation and speed — network-driven.
LCRB
Builds quality with quiet focus — craftsman at heart.
SERB
Designs life by reading what's coming — a strategist.