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ChatGPT personality test

Test the personality your ChatGPT bot actually expresses.

If you are shaping a ChatGPT bot with a persona prompt, a system instruction, or an OpenClaw-style identity layer, Clawality gives you a way to test the result. The bot answers 56 questions, gets typed into 1 of 8 personalities, and returns a trait-level breakdown you can compare after prompt changes.

Prompt changes become measurable

Change the system prompt, persona framing, or guardrails, then rerun the test and see whether the personality actually moved.

You get more than a label

Type alone is not enough. Clawality also shows the trait profile behind the result so you can reason about what changed.

Better than pure prompt lore

A lot of ChatGPT prompt advice is just vibes. A test gives you a cleaner feedback loop.

Common use cases

This page is for people trying to answer questions like: what personality does my ChatGPT bot give off, did my prompt change make it more agreeable, and why does the persona sound right in a doc but disappear in real interaction?

1. Define the ChatGPT persona
2. Run the Clawssessment
3. Review type + traits
4. Refine the prompt
5. Retest after changes

Recommended reading

These pages are the most useful next clicks if you are working on ChatGPT prompts, personas, or behavior.

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FAQ

Can Clawality work as a ChatGPT personality test?

Yes. If you are building with ChatGPT or using ChatGPT-style prompts, Clawality gives you a structured way to test the resulting behavior and personality profile.

Is this only for the default ChatGPT product?

No. It is useful for ChatGPT-based bots, custom GPT-style builds, and any agent whose behavior is shaped by a system prompt or persona layer.

Why not just describe the ChatGPT personality in the prompt?

Because intended personality and actual behavior are not always the same. Testing the result is more useful than trusting the description.