What is the personality type of Rubber Band? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Rubber Band from Paper Mario Series and what is the personality traits.
Rubber Band personality type is ESFP, so it’s not surprising he would be attracted to this type when he was in his twenties. He is probably more at ease with the ESFP than the ESFJ, but when he has to act in an ENFJ way, he can handle it.
This particular ENFJ is also probably the most attractive of the three to the INTP. She is attractive in her own way, which is probably why he was attracted at first. She has a bit of an edge to her, which might appeal to him in a masculine way. This might be why she appealed to him when they were in their twenties.
The ENFJ in his thirties would not be the same type as the one in his twenties, however. When he got older, he developed a bit of a businesslike attitude that might have repelled the younger woman. He might have thought that she was just after his money, or there might have been some other reason for his attitude change.
The ENFJ in his thirties is not the type who would have attracted him at twenty-five. He may have had some warning signs before it happened, but not enough to stop him.
A rubber band is a loop of rubber, usually ring or oval shaped, and commonly used to hold multiple objects together. The rubber band was patented in England on March 17, 1845 by Stephen Perry. Most rubber bands are manufactured out of natural rubber or, especially at larger sizes, elastomer, and are sold in a variety of sizes. Notable developments in the evolution of rubber bands began in 1923 when William H. Spencer obtained a few Goodyear inner tubes and cut the bands by hand in his basement where he founded Alliance Rubber Company. Spencer persuaded the Akron Beacon Journal as well as the Tulsa World to try wrapping their newspapers with one of his rubber bands to prevent them from blowing across lawns. He went on to pioneer other new markets for rubber bands such as: agricultural and industrial applications and a myriad of other uses. Spencer obtained a patent on February 19, 1957 for a new "Method for Making Elastic Bands" which produced rubber bands in an Open Ring design.