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Who Are You From “Over the Garden Wall” Based On Your Food Preferences?

Are you a fan of the animated miniseries Over the Garden Wall? Have you ever wondered which character you would be based on your food preferences? Well, wonder no more! Take our quiz and discover if you're more like Wirt, the thoughtful and anxious older brother, or Greg, the carefree and imaginative younger brother. Maybe you're more like Beatrice, the sassy bluebird, or the Woodsman, the mysterious protector of the forest. So, let's find out! Scroll down and click the Start button to begin the quiz.

Welcome to Quiz: Who Are You From Over the Garden Wall Based On Your Food Preferences

About “Over the Garden Wall” in a few words:

Over the Garden Wall is a ten-episode miniseries that follows two brothers, Wirt and Greg, as they journey through a mysterious forest known as the Unknown. Along the way, they encounter strange creatures and unusual characters, while trying to find their way home. The show has a dark fairy-tale aesthetic and is full of humor, heart, and unforgettable music. It first aired in 2014 and has since become a cult classic among fans of animation and fantasy.

Meet the characters from Over the Garden Wall

Wirt

Wirt is the broody, melodramatic kid who tried very hard to be an adult and mostly succeeded at being adorably awkward instead. He overthinks everything (like, everything — decisions, tone of voice, whether to eat the sandwich) and yet somehow steps up when it actually matters, which is kinda the whole point, right? He’s always got a cape and a clarinet and a poet’s habit of writing moody lines on napkins that he then forgets in his jacket (or maybe he remembers, depends on the week). He’s solemn and self-serious and also ridiculously tender underneath it all, protective in a way that sneaks up on you. Also: has a tendency to dramatically declaim while tripping over his own feet — very theatrical, very Wirt.

Gregory

Gregory is pure chaotic sunshine, a tiny whirlwind with a frog and an optimistic comment for every situation — yes even when stuff is literally trying to eat them. He’s loud and messy and impossibly creative (nonsense songs, marshmallow negotiations, questionable snack choices), and somehow his cluelessness doubles as bravery, which is the cutest paradox ever. He names things (the frog is named like three times a day), believes in improbable solutions, and is bafflingly emotionally sharp when it counts — like, he’ll hand you a paper bag and a hug in the same breath. He loses socks, gains friends, insists on wearing a teapot-looking hat sometimes, and generally makes the world feel less scary by being delightfully weird.

Beatrice

Beatrice is the sassy bluebird with a biting wit and, beneath that sharp beak, an actual soft spot that she will deny until the end of time (and then quietly fix your shoe). She’s the planner, the map-reader, the one who says the sensible thing and also the cruel joke — but mostly she’s loyal and secretly terrified of how much she cares. She talks like she’s seen everything (and maybe she has), gives excellent sarcastic commentary, and is annoyingly efficient at getting the boys moving — bossy but useful, honestly. Also: sometimes you get the sense she collects tiny shiny things for reasons she won’t explain, and sometimes she acts like she’s the responsible adult even if she definitely isn’t all the time.