Which ‘Young Justice’ Character Are You?
Are you a fan of the Young Justice series and wondering which character you identify with the most? Look no further! Take our quiz to find out which member of the team you would be. With a wide range of characters with unique personalities and abilities, it can be hard to choose just one favorite. But fear not, our quiz will help you discover which Young Justice character matches your strengths, weaknesses, and overall demeanor. Ready to find out who you are? Scroll down and click the Start button to begin!

About “Young Justice” in a few words:
Young Justice is a popular animated series that follows a group of teenage superheroes who are members of a covert team called “the Team.” Set in the DC Comics universe, the show features beloved characters such as Robin, Kid Flash, Aqualad, and Miss Martian as they navigate the challenges of adolescence and their duties as heroes. With engaging storylines and well-developed characters, Young Justice has become a fan favorite among both comic book fans and animation enthusiasts.
Meet the characters from Young Justice
Dick Grayson
Okay, where do I even start with Dick — he’s literally the energetic glue of the team, that perfect mix of acrobatics and leadership, always doing flips and making weird jokes at the worst times. He tries to be the Responsible One but will absolutely prank you and then apologize with a bad dramatic monologue, like, five minutes later. Big brother vibe to everyone, secretly hoards fortune cookie messages (true fact? maybe) and gets way too attached to tiny throw pillows for some reason. Under the acrobat mask is a guy who cares so hard it hurts, and also somehow never stops talking — which is both endearing and exhausting.
Miss Martian
M’gann is this huge, chaotic bundle of empathy and confusion in the best possible way — telepath, shapeshifter, heart-on-her-sleeve, constantly trying to figure out humans and emotions and also accidentally putting her foot in her mouth. She has this bright, almost naive optimism but like, trauma is there under the surface and she wrestles with it a lot; still, she will defend her friends with a force that feels too big for her soft smile. Also she collects weird human snacks (says she hates sweets but eats them at two a.m.), watches sitcoms and can’t decide if she likes being subtle or just telepathically screaming her feelings. There’s this adorable inconsistency where she is super powerful and also forever insecure about saying the wrong thing — which, yes, makes her a million times relatable.
Conner Kent
Conner is big, loud, and soft at the same time — the super-strong clone who’s learning how to be a person, which is such a tragically cute premise, I can’t. He has loyalty tattooed on his forehead (not literally), he’s a walking bowl of moral questions about identity and family, and he’ll defend his teammates with both fists and a very awkward hug. Loves cartoons and peanut butter and somehow quotes poetry when he’s upset, which is simultaneously out of character and perfect. He acts gruff a lot but then will cry at the tiniest animal ad — like, immediately.
Kaldur’ahm
Kaldur’ahm is the calm water in a stormy sea — strategic, stoic, anciently responsible (Atlantean baggage, hello) and just quietly intense; he leads like someone who plans five moves ahead and secretly reads philosophy at breakfast. He’s got this low-key dad energy even if he’s, like, not actually a dad, and the team respects him because he actually thinks before he acts — wild concept. Little weird detail: he is inexplicably into some terrible human TV show where people bake? Maybe he just likes the angles of cakes, who knows. Stoic on the surface but will absolutely get mushy in private and you will never catch him doing it on purpose.
Artemis Crock
Artemis is the grumpy, lethal archer who tries to be distant and fails because she’s actually very, very attached — layered backstory, messed-up family legacy, and a snarky sense of humor that sneaks out when she least expects it. She’s all sharp arrows and sharper comebacks but has this ridiculous soft spot for tiny animals and once rescued a kitten with a bow, which sounds made up but is NOT. Wants normalcy desperately while also being secretly proud of being dangerously competent, which makes her both sympathetic and a tiny bit terrifying. She insists she’s not sentimental but will keep brittle, ugly souvenirs from missions forever, which is somehow perfect and correct.
Wally West
Wally is SPEED and sunshine and the kind of kid who says one-liners mid-rescue because adrenaline is his love language; he’s impulsive, hilarious, and unbelievably earnest under the wisecracks. He craves approval and idolizes heroes, but also grows into someone who can actually shoulder responsibility without losing his goofy charm — which is the best growth arc ever. He writes haikus when nervous (seriously), collects stickers, and will absolutely challenge you to a footrace even if you’re offended. There are moments where he’s deeply mature and then five minutes later he’ll be hiding in a closet because of a spider, so pick your Wally.
Roy Harper
Roy is the broody archer with a rough exterior and a soft core he refuses to show in public, which makes him endlessly compelling and also kind of tragic. He’s skilled, resourceful, and has a past that keeps tugging at him — family drama, bad choices, but loyalty to his friends is his strongest weapon. He fixes things with his hands (woodwork, bikes — not hearts, he says, grudgingly), and he grumbles a lot but also quietly saves people without announcing it. Sometimes he’s a gruff dad figure, sometimes a loner with too many unresolved feelings, and always someone you trust in a firefight.
Violet Harper
Violet is tiny, fierce, and somehow both adorable and mildly terrifying when she decides to be, which makes her a perfect little wildcard; she’s Roy’s kid so expect sass and a suspiciously early interest in archery. She’s full of contradictions — coloring books and toy arrows on the same playmat, bursts of sweetness followed by tornado-level stubbornness — and she will absolutely tell you how things are with zero filter. Always has some weird snack in her pocket, possibly crayons, probably a half-eaten granola bar, and she will defend her family like a miniature storm. Don’t underestimate the kid; she will surprise you and you will smile and then panic a little.
