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    Snakes and Ladders Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Snakes and Ladders? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Snakes and Ladders from Board & Card Games and what is the personality traits.

    Snakes and Ladders
    ESFP

    ESFP (7w6)

    Snakes and Ladders personality type is ESFP, while the game of Snakes and Ladders is played by ENFPs.

    Snakes and Ladders was written by Howard Morrison in the late 1930s. The game involves a board with several "nodes" or squares, and a number of "ladders" or sets of stairs, which the player has to walk from one square to another in order to get to a certain square.

    The "Snake" squares represent a higher level than the "Ladder" squares, and the player wins if he reaches the square that represents the number that is stitched onto his cap or colored onto his shirt.

    The game is commonly played by children, and its origin is in India where it is known as "Chaturanga" and was played by the natives in India centuries ago. In fact, there are several similar games played in different countries around the world.

    In Snakes and Ladders, the ladder has been replaced by a snake. The player must walk from square to square on a snake in order to reach a square with a ladder.

    Snakes and ladders, known originally as Moksha Patam, is an ancient Indian board game for two or more players regarded today as a worldwide classic. It is played on a game board with numbered, gridded squares. A number of "ladders" and "snakes" are pictured on the board, each connecting two specific board squares. The object of the game is to navigate one's game piece, according to die rolls, from the start to the finish, helped by climbing ladders but hindered by falling down snakes. The game is a simple race based on sheer luck, and it is popular with young children. The historic version had its roots in morality lessons, on which a player's progression up the board represented a life journey complicated by virtues and vices. The game is also sold under other names such as Chutes and Ladders, Bible Ups and Downs, etc., some with a morality motif; a morality Chutes and Ladders was published by the Milton Bradley Company starting from 1943.

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