There's no single official MBTI type for Harley Quinn, as different fans and analyses suggest various types, most commonly ENFP (The Campaigner) or ESFP (The Entertainer) due to her chaotic, people-oriented, and emotionally driven nature, though some argue for INFJ (The Advocate) for her deeper, complex inner world and shift from Harleen Quinzel. Her personality is fluid, often described as histrionic and impulsive, making her difficult to pin down to one type.
Harley Quinn: INFJ [Official Retype] I know, this may seem bizarre. Many sites type her as ESFP, so this may seem an odd typing. In DC comics and elsewhere she is represented she is an INFJ, however.
Harley Quinn from Harley Quinn (the DC Universe show that started this year) is INFJ. Shadow Weaver from She-Ra and the princess of power is also typed INFJ. Varys from GoT is often typed as INFJ. Merlin from Trollhunters is typed as INFJ as well.
Harley Quinn is bisexual and has been in a relationship with The Joker, and, more recently, in a non-monogamous relationship with Poison Ivy. Other characters have been portrayed as bisexual in Batman media adaptations. Gotham's Barbara Kean and Tabitha Galavan are also confirmed to be bisexual.
Despite both characters being hyped up as super crazy, neither is usually portrayed as all that crazy. They're both pretty aware of the world around them and their own actions. That being said The Joker is usually calculating and willfully malevolent, where Harley acts out of a genuinely twisted understanding of love.
Harley's true journey towards healthy "relationship goals"—one built on love, respect, and mutual healing—lies not with the Joker, but with Poison Ivy. Harley Quinn's origin story, at its core, is a tragic tale of manipulation and vulnerability.
Harley Quinn's trauma is rooted in her destructive relationship with the Joker. Initially, Harleen Quinzel is a dedicated psychiatrist, but her fascination with the Joker leads her to abandon her values and allow herself to be manipulated.
Pansexuality is defined as an attraction to people of any gender or to people regardless of their gender, with the prefix “pan” coming from the Greek prefix for “all.” Pansexuality isn't a more evolved or “politically correct” form of bisexuality; it isn't more or less trans/nonbinary inclusive; it's just a word to ...
Nightwing wakes up and finds he has been tied to a bed. Harley shows him a pile of rejection letters and that her criminal past prevents her from getting rehired as a psychiatrist. Eventually, the two sleep together.
Personality. She is a wacky, humorous, and a lively tomboy. She is a supreme prankster.
The 12 Dark Sides of an INFJ: To Know Them is to Handle Them
Jinx: ENFP (Ne-Fi-Te-Si)
Her inventive and chaotic nature pointed us toward dominant Ne. She's constantly tinkering, and coming up with new devices. In addition, her actions are anything but straightforward. She's hard to predict, which is partly what makes her so dangerous.
Well, that person could be characterized as a “Sigma personality”.
Everyone knows Harley Quinn as the Jokers' girl, but how did she become Harley Quinn? Personality Disorder, specifically, Histrionic Personality Disorder plays a key part in Harley Quinn's life.
The Joker has long been recognized as an ENTP.
Snow from The Hunger Games as an INTJ.
Joker Jr. was born after The Joker, who had manipulated Harley Quinn into re-entering a life of crime, impregnated her without her knowing. Harley out of shame refused to accept the child and gave him up. He grew up being transferred from various orphanages and foster homes to people who never loved him.
The DC Comics character of Dick Grayson (best known as the sidekick Robin and later the hero Nightwing) has been subtextally coded queer since his first appearance over seventy-five years ago.
Following is a list of those romantic partners that have been prominently portrayed in comics books and other media:
Pansexuality is the romantic, emotional, and/or sexual attraction to people regardless of their gender. Like everyone else, pansexual people may be attracted to some people and not others, but the gender of the person does not matter. People of any gender identity can and do identify as pansexual.
Skoliosexual describes attraction to transgender, genderqueer, and/or non-binary individuals, focusing on those outside the traditional male/female gender binary, though its meaning is debated, with some finding it empowering to name this specific attraction and others finding the term problematic due to its Greek root meaning "bent" or "crooked" and preferring broader terms like pansexuality or ceterosexuality (attraction to non-binary people specifically).
People who identify as omnisexual are attracted to those of all gender identities and sexual orientations. Omnisexuality is in the category of multisexuality, which includes people who are attracted to more than one gender.
His men captured Harleen and strapped her to an electro-shock table, where the Joker administered electro-shock therapy, that combined with the Joker's twisted influence completely warped her mind.
That's just Harley's symbol in most versions, the four diamonds. It's different from the Takeda clan symbol because theirs is horizontal, where hers is vertical. So it looks like a playing card diamond.