Triant is an experimental political ideology test developed by European Strategy. Think of the Political Compass, but three times as granular and with 12 archetypes. You will answer 42 randomized questions on an agreement scale. At the end, you will receive a 6-dimensional profile and your closest ideological archetypes.
The 12 Archetypes
Alongside these archetypes, Triant also calculates a Polarization Score based on how strongly or moderately you answer across all 42 questions.
You strongly favor egalitarian economics, ecological restraint, social progress, global cooperation, civil liberties, and institutional reform. This profile often emphasizes solidarity across borders, rights expansion, and public-interest governance backed by evidence.
You combine market-leaning economics with cultural traditionalism, national preference, law-and-order instincts, and deep distrust of elite institutions. This profile tends to frame politics as people-versus-establishment and prioritize sovereignty over international constraint.
You prefer market-oriented policy with technocratic institutions, moderate social liberalism, and pragmatic globalism. This profile values incremental reform, rules-based systems, and expert-led policy design over sweeping ideological rupture.
You emphasize redistribution, robust public goods, social inclusion, and democratic accountability. This profile often seeks to constrain concentrated private power while preserving civil liberties and participatory institutions.
You prioritize free markets and personal autonomy with strong skepticism toward coercive state power. This profile often resists censorship and surveillance, defends property rights, and prefers decentralized voluntary ordering over centralized authority.
You are future-oriented, highly pro-innovation, and willing to trade tradition for rapid technological progress. This profile typically backs growth, engineering-led climate solutions, transhuman trajectories, and global techno-economic integration.
You blend cultural traditionalism and social order with trust in durable institutions. This profile generally favors continuity, procedural legitimacy, and gradual adaptation rather than disruptive transformation.
You prioritize ecological limits, local resilience, and solidarity-focused economics while preserving a strong communal social fabric. This profile tends to emphasize stewardship, anti-extractive policy, and social cohesion over hyper-individualism.
You favor strategic state capacity, industrial policy, and national cohesion to strengthen domestic prosperity and sovereignty. This profile often supports selective markets, strong institutions, and guarded openness to global systems.
You distrust elites and centralized authority across the board while insisting on grassroots control. This profile can combine anti-establishment sentiment with maximal civil liberty and skepticism toward both corporate and bureaucratic concentration.
You support decisive centralized governance to execute ambitious national projects and social engineering goals. This profile values order, capacity, and long-horizon planning, often accepting constraints on liberty to pursue collective outcomes.
You cluster near the center and evaluate policy by practical outcomes over rigid doctrine. This profile tends to tolerate mixed economies, balanced rights-and-order tradeoffs, and evidence-based iteration across changing conditions.