Which ‘Blindspot’ Character Are You?
Welcome to the "Blindspot Character Quiz"! Have you ever wondered which character from the popular TV series Blindspot best represents your personality? Are you more like the brave and skilled FBI agent Kurt Weller, the enigmatic and mysterious Jane Doe, or the tech-savvy and humorous Patterson? Well, now is your chance to find out! Take this fun and exciting quiz and discover which Blindspot character you are most like. So, what are you waiting for? Scroll down and click the "Start" button to begin the quiz!

About “Blindspot” in a few words:
Blindspot is a thrilling American TV series that follows the story of Jane Doe, a mysterious woman who is found naked in Times Square with no memories of her past or identity, but with her body covered in intricate tattoos. As the FBI tries to decode the tattoos and uncover Jane’s identity, they discover that she is linked to a vast conspiracy that threatens national security. With each tattoo leading the team to a new danger, they must race against time to unravel the mystery and save the country from impending doom. The series features a talented cast, including Jaimie Alexander, Sullivan Stapleton, and Ashley Johnson, among others.
Meet the characters from Blindspot
Kurt Weller
Kurt is the rock — steady, stubborn, and annoyingly reliable in that way that makes you want to roll your eyes and then call him when things go sideways. He’s the kind of FBI guy who reads you the law like it’s bedtime and also cries at sappy commercials (yes, really). Leadership comes naturally but he gets muddled by personal stuff, especially family drama, and can be bafflingly sentimental about old records or whatever item-of-the-week he decides to hoard. Also, he has surprisingly bad aim with takeout chopsticks even though he’s precise in every other part of his life.
Jane Doe
Jane is chaos wrapped in calm — a walking mystery with a brain full of skills, a body full of tattoos, and a face that makes you forget how to breathe for a minute. She’s lethal and tender at once, like someone who can defuse a bomb and then make you tea and ask if you slept enough (she cares, but don’t get weird about it). She forgets her past but not the little things — song lyrics, the scent of rain, how to be stubbornly brave — and she’s sometimes hilariously blunt about feelings she doesn’t quite remember, which is both heartbreaking and kind of adorable. Also, she claims she hates sweets but will demolish a whole slice of pie at 2 a.m. and then act surprised.
Tasha Zapata
Tasha is the no-nonsense backbone — detective energy, practical suspension-of-drama skills, and a dry sense of humor that sneaks up on you. She’s fiercely loyal to her team and has the kind of calm that makes chaos feel manageable, though she absolutely has a low-key temper that surfaces when someone wastes time. In private she’s weirdly domestic (cookbook hoarder? probably) and will absolutely beat you at pool while giving one-word advice, and yet she can also be the first to cry at a good dog story, so there’s that. Also, she pretends she hates candles but actually owns a suspiciously large number of them.
Patterson
Patterson is the brilliant, slightly awkward tech wizard who would absolutely dismantle your assumptions and then make you an Excel graph about why your feelings are valid. She’s sarcastic and precise, loves data the way other people love people (no offense), and will drop a devastating one-liner then flinch like she didn’t mean it — very endearing. She collects obscure facts, has an unusual snack habit (was it pickles with peanut butter? maybe), and treats her lab like a tiny, over-organized kingdom where she is the benevolent, slightly neurotic monarch. Also allergic to chaos but somehow thrives in it when the code finally works.
Edgar Reade
Edgar is street-smart with a golden heart and the kind of charm that feels like warm coffee — comforting, caffeinated, and possibly a little addictive. He’s got history, makes mistakes, bounces back, and believes in second chances even when he’s grumpily pretending not to; also sometimes he’s inexplicably into cheesy pop songs and will sing them off-key with full conviction. He’s tactile and direct, terrible at office politics, great at reading people, and has an annoyingly comforting way of turning a mess into a plan. Also, he claims he doesn’t like kids but then volunteers to fix toys for neighborhood kids at 3 a.m., so who knows.
