What is the personality type of Freya Crescent? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Freya Crescent from Final Fantasy Ix and what is the personality traits.
Freya Crescent personality type is INFJ, and I’m still on my quest to understand and accept this.
The INFJ personality type is one of the rarest and most difficult to understand. Infj personalities are often misunderstood and mislabeled as introverts, due to their tendency to be quiet and reserved. But they are not introverts, and INFJs are not shy.
While INFJs may prefer to spend time alone, they are not introverts. They like to be alone, but they don’t need it. INFJs thrive on social interaction and love to be with people; they just need alone time to recharge and process information and emotions.
Although INFJs enjoy spending time alone, they prefer to be with others. They like to talk and engage in deep conversations – and it’s not always about the subject – the INFJ thrives on learning more about others and gaining insight. INFJs can feel uncomfortable sitting in silence for too long, so they need to have conversations with people they are comfortable with. INFJs are not easily bored, so they can be talkative to the point of being annoying.
To understand the INFJ personality type, you have to understand their introverted intuition (Ni).
Freya is a skilled and powerful dragon warrior with a sharp mind, but her longing for her lost love burdens her. She is humble and friendly, as seen when she speaks to Eiko or Vivi. She can also joke around with Zidane, saying she will "kick his butt" in the pub in Lindblum because he's flirting with girls. As a dragon knight, she can put aside her doubts and join forces with others when necessary, even teaming up with her former enemy Beatrix at one point.
Freya faces much tragedy yet holds out hope. She may appear to live in the past, ever hopeful she'll be reunited with Fratley, but actually chooses to live for the future, by sustaining memories of the past. In the Japanese version Freya speaks archaically. She speaks in Rōjingo (老人語, lit. Sociolect of Elderly People), which was used in Edo-era Tokyo and is similar to modern-day Hiroshima dialect.