Ji-yeong (Player 240) from Squid Game
Squid Game

Ji-yeong (Player 240)

INFPThe MediatorDiplomats
“Thank you. For playing with me.”

Why is Ji-yeong (Player 240) INFP?

Ji-yeong is the INFP whose dominant Fi processes her entire life experience through a deeply personal emotional framework that ultimately leads to the series' most quietly devastating sacrifice. She evaluates everything through internal values—her father's abuse, her mother's murder, her time in prison—and reaches the profoundly personal conclusion that her life has been defined by pain while Sae-byeok's still holds the possibility of meaning through her brother. Her auxiliary Ne allows her to see beyond the immediate marble game to the larger emotional truth: that this moment is not about winning or losing but about choosing whose story deserves to continue, a reframing that transforms a death game into an act of grace. Her tertiary Si provides the accumulated weight of painful memories that inform her decision—she is not being impulsive but drawing on a lifetime of stored experience to reach her conclusion about the relative value of two lives. Her inferior Te surfaces as her complete disinterest in the strategic dimension of the game; she never attempts to win because Te-driven competition is irrelevant to her Fi assessment of the situation. Ji-yeong's sacrifice is the most INFP moment in the series: a deeply internal, values-based decision made with quiet certainty, expressing love through the ultimate act of giving without any expectation of recognition or reward. Her final words are about gratitude, not regret—pure Fi authenticity in the face of death.
INFP
The Mediator
Diplomats

Ji-yeong (Player 240) shares the INFP personality type with other visionary, complex characters across fiction and real life.

Explore the full INFP profile →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Ji-yeong (Player 240)'s MBTI personality type?

Ji-yeong (Player 240) from Squid Game is INFP — The Mediator. Ji-yeong is the INFP whose dominant Fi processes her entire life experience through a deeply personal emotional framework that ultimately leads to the series' most quietly devastating sacrifice. She evaluates everything through internal values—her father's abuse, her mother's murder, her time in prison—and reaches the profoundly personal conclusion that her life has been defined by pain while Sae-byeok's still holds the possibility of meaning through her brother. Her auxiliary Ne allows her to see beyond the immediate marble game to the larger emotional truth: that this moment is not about winning or losing but about choosing whose story deserves to continue, a reframing that transforms a death game into an act of grace. Her tertiary Si provides the accumulated weight of painful memories that inform her decision—she is not being impulsive but drawing on a lifetime of stored experience to reach her conclusion about the relative value of two lives. Her inferior Te surfaces as her complete disinterest in the strategic dimension of the game; she never attempts to win because Te-driven competition is irrelevant to her Fi assessment of the situation. Ji-yeong's sacrifice is the most INFP moment in the series: a deeply internal, values-based decision made with quiet certainty, expressing love through the ultimate act of giving without any expectation of recognition or reward. Her final words are about gratitude, not regret—pure Fi authenticity in the face of death.

Is Ji-yeong (Player 240) INFP?

Yes, Ji-yeong (Player 240) is widely typed as INFP (The Mediator). Ji-yeong is the INFP whose dominant Fi processes her entire life experience through a deeply personal emotional framework that ultimately leads to the series' most quietly devastating sacrifice. She e

What personality type is Ji-yeong (Player 240)?

Ji-yeong (Player 240)'s personality type is INFP, also known as The Mediator. This type belongs to the Diplomats family in MBTI. Ji-yeong is the INFP whose dominant Fi processes her entire life experience through a deeply personal emotional framework that ultimately leads to the

INFP Cognitive Function Stack

The four cognitive functions that define how Ji-yeong (Player 240) processes information and makes decisions.

Fi
Introverted FeelingDominant

The INFP's dominant Introverted Feeling is the function of the internal compass — the deeply personal value system that operates as an absolute standard against which every experience, relationship, and choice is evaluated. In fiction, INFP characters are the ones who cannot be argued out of their convictions, because their convictions are not based on external authority but on something that feels as immediate and certain as their own heartbeat. This function is the source of both their authenticity and their occasional inflexibility: when their core values are at stake, they are immovable.

Ne
Extroverted IntuitionAuxiliary

Extroverted Intuition provides the INFP character's imaginative richness — the capacity to see multiple possible meanings, interpretations, and futures, and the delight in the symbolic and metaphorical that makes them natural storytellers and meaning-makers. Ne in service of Fi creates the quality that defines INFP characters in fiction: the inner world so rich and detailed that they seem to be living partially in a story of their own construction, one with moral dimensions and symbolic resonances that others don't see.

Si
Introverted SensingTertiary

Introverted Sensing gives INFP characters their deep relationship to personal memory and accumulated experience — the specific details of the past that remain vivid and emotionally significant long after the events themselves. In fiction, this function manifests as the INFP character's attachment to objects, places, and memories with high emotional meaning, their loyalty to those who have been present during formative moments, and their sensitivity to experiences that echo previous ones.

Te
Extroverted ThinkingInferior

Extroverted Thinking is the INFP's inferior function — the domain of efficiency, objective systems, and results-oriented organization that they find least natural. Under stress, INFP characters may become unexpectedly harsh and critical (Te erupting without Fi's usual tempering), or they may avoid the practical implementation that their visions require. Their character development often involves learning to value structure as the condition that allows their idealism to become real in the world.

Key INFP Traits in Ji-yeong (Player 240)

Core personality traits that characters like Ji-yeong (Player 240) consistently display.

  • ✩Deeply personal values that function as an absolute internal compass
  • ✩Rich imaginative inner world more vivid than most people's outer one
  • ✩Idealism that persists even when the world consistently disappoints it
  • ✩Authentic self-expression as a core need rather than a choice
  • ✩Sensitivity to criticism that can appear as defensiveness
  • ✩Strong capacity for empathy especially with the marginalized and overlooked
  • ✩Quiet resistance to any identity or system that doesn't honor their truth

Ji-yeong (Player 240)'s Mystic Profile

Discover Ji-yeong (Player 240)'s cosmic connections through zodiac, tarot, crystals, and spirit animals.

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pisces

Zodiac Prediction

The INFP character maps onto Pisces — the sign of the dreamer who lives at the boundary between the material and the transcendent, who feels the suffering of the world with a permeability that is both gift and burden, and who creates from the depth of that feeling something that touches others because it came from a place that bypassed all defense. Pisces and INFP share the quality of emotional porousness: the inability to fully separate self from other, to remain unmoved by what they witness, to maintain the distance that others manage. In fiction, INFP characters carry the Pisces quality of the idealist who will not compromise with a world that has not yet become what it should be.

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the moon

Tarot Card Match

The Moon — the tarot card of the deep unconscious, of the imagination that shapes experience from below, of the path that winds through shadow with incomplete illumination — is the INFP character's card. The Moon does not illuminate directly but reflects: the light it offers is borrowed, partial, and life-changing. INFP characters have this Moon quality — their understanding comes through feeling and imagination rather than direct perception, and their expression of that understanding often takes forms (story, art, metaphor) that operate on the same indirect, reflective level. The Moon also speaks to the emotional depth that characterizes INFP: the tidal quality of feeling that rises and falls with its own logic.

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moonstone

Crystal Match

Moonstone — the feldspar with the adularescence that makes it appear lit from within, associated with intuition, with the inner life, with the emotional rhythms that move beneath conscious awareness — is the INFP character's stone. Moonstone is one of the few crystals whose beauty is entirely internal: it appears luminous not because of reflected light but because of the light-scattering phenomenon within its layers. INFP characters have this moonstone quality — the inner luminosity that is visible to those who look carefully, the beauty that comes from depth rather than surface, and the emotional intelligence that glows most distinctly in conditions of stillness.

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deer

Spirit Animal

The deer serves the INFP as it does the INFJ, though with a different emphasis: where the INFJ deer is the seer navigating danger through awareness, the INFP deer is the creature of the forest's interior, moving through spaces dense with meaning and beauty, carrying its sensitivity as the very organ of its experience. The deer's presence is gentle and non-threatening in a way that invites approach rather than flight — and this is the INFP quality: the openness that makes connection possible, the vulnerability that is not weakness but the courage to remain unarmored in a world that rewards armor.

Other INFP Characters

Characters from other shows who share Ji-yeong (Player 240)'s INFP personality type:

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