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Personality Quiz

Which Steven Universe Gem Are You?

10 questions. 6 possible results. Discover which Steven Universe character matches your personality, values, and choices.

About the Steven Universe Characters
Garnet

Garnet

Garnet is the leader of the Crystal Gems, and she's hiding the biggest secret in the show in plain sight: she's a fusion. Garnet is the permanent fusion of Ruby and Sapphire — two gems who fell in love during the Gem War and chose to stay fused because their relationship is their identity. Garnet doesn't just experience love; she is love, literally. Her future vision lets her see diverging timelines, and she consistently chooses the path that protects her family. She's stoic but not cold, strong but not rigid, and her rare emotional moments hit harder because of how composed she normally is. When Garnet sings "Stronger Than You" to Jasper — "I am a conversation. I am made of love" — it's one of the most powerful statements of identity in animation. Garnet proves that the strongest thing you can be is yourself, even when the world says you shouldn't exist.

  • stable
  • loving
  • visionary
  • powerful
  • composed
Pearl

Pearl

Pearl was made to be a servant. In Homeworld's caste system, Pearls are decorative accessories — designed to look pretty, hold things, and stay silent. Pearl did none of that. She chose Rose Quartz, chose the rebellion, chose to fight a war against her own civilization because she believed in something greater. But Pearl's liberation is complicated by her all-consuming devotion to Rose — a love that defined her for thousands of years and left her devastated when Rose gave up her form to create Steven. Pearl is the show's most complex character: brilliant, graceful, and capable of terrible jealousy. She lies to Garnet (shattering their trust), she projects her grief onto Steven, and she hoards secrets that hurt everyone. But she also grows. Slowly, painfully, Pearl learns to be a person — not a servant, not a soldier, not an extension of someone she loved. Just Pearl. It's the quietest, bravest arc in the show.

  • devoted
  • precise
  • grief-stricken
  • resilient
  • evolving
Amethyst

Amethyst

Amethyst was created in the Prime Kindergarten on Earth — but she emerged late, long after the other Gems had left. She's smaller than a standard Quartz soldier, and this "defect" haunts her throughout the series. When she meets Jasper — a "perfect" Quartz — her insecurities erupt. Amethyst compensates with humour, recklessness, and shape-shifting (she can be anything, so maybe she doesn't have to be herself). But beneath the rough exterior is someone who desperately wants to belong. Her arc is about learning that being "wrong" by Homeworld's standards doesn't make her wrong by Earth's. The Kindergarten that made her isn't her origin story — the Crystal Gems are. Amethyst's relationship with Steven evolves from sibling rivalry to genuine mutual support, and her fusion with him (Smoky Quartz) is a celebration of two people who thought they were defective discovering they're perfect together.

  • fun-loving
  • insecure
  • adaptable
  • loyal
  • raw
Lapis Lazuli

Lapis Lazuli

Lapis Lazuli was trapped in a mirror for thousands of years, used as an information tool by the Crystal Gems without anyone realizing she was a sentient being. When Steven freed her, she became one of the show's most compelling and difficult characters. Lapis has immense power — she can control entire oceans — but she's also deeply traumatized. Her time fused with Jasper as Malachite is a harrowing metaphor for toxic relationships: Lapis held Jasper prisoner at the bottom of the ocean, and later admitted she did it partly because it felt good to be the one in control for once. That honesty is what makes Lapis extraordinary. She doesn't pretend to be healed. She doesn't pretend she's okay. She runs away (literally, into space) rather than face another war. But she comes back. Every time, she comes back. Lapis is Steven Universe's portrait of trauma recovery — messy, non-linear, and ultimately hopeful.

  • traumatized
  • powerful
  • conflicted
  • honest
  • resilient
Peridot

Peridot

Peridot starts as an antagonist — a Homeworld technician sent to check on the Cluster, a forced-fusion geo-weapon buried in Earth's core. She's efficient, dismissive, and views the Crystal Gems as primitives. But when she's stranded on Earth and gradually absorbed into Steven's orbit, something extraordinary happens: she changes. Not quickly, not easily, and not without screaming "CLODS!" at the Diamonds first. Peridot's defection from Homeworld is one of the show's most satisfying arcs because it feels earned. She doesn't change because she's told to; she changes because the evidence changes. She's a scientist, and the data says Homeworld is wrong. Her friendship with Steven, her bond with Amethyst, and her obsession with Camp Piling Hearts ("meep morp") are all part of a fundamental reconstruction of identity. Peridot proves that even someone built for a system can choose to reject it — one logged observation at a time.

  • analytical
  • blunt
  • curious
  • evolving
  • passionate
Jasper

Jasper

Jasper is a Quartz soldier created on Earth in the Beta Kindergarten — technically defective conditions, but she emerged as the single most powerful Gem of her type. She became a legend: Homeworld's ultimate warrior, loyal to the Diamonds, and contemptuous of anything she perceives as weakness. When she arrives on Earth, she defeats Garnet, captures the Crystal Gems, and seems unstoppable. But Jasper's story is a tragedy of rigidity. She can't adapt, can't grow, can't accept that strength alone isn't enough. Her obsession with fusion as a weapon (first Malachite, then corrupted Gems) leads to her own corruption — a physical manifestation of her refusal to change. Even in Steven Universe Future, when Steven heals her corruption, Jasper can't bring herself to join the others. She serves Steven because he defeated her, not because she believes in his values. Jasper is the character who proves that being the strongest doesn't mean you win — especially when the fight is with yourself.

  • powerful
  • proud
  • rigid
  • disciplined
  • tragic
Question 1 of 1010%

How do you handle responsibility?

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