On General Hospital, personality matters, especially when it comes to a love match. You want to mesh with that person, but you need compatibility. In Port Charles, that kind of thing matters more than it should. Because the wrong person doesn’t just cause problems. It can leave you dealing with fallout you didn’t see coming until it’s already too late.
Dive into the personality types of your favorite characters using Myers-Brigg perronality types and see which one would be right for you.
ENTJ – Sonny Corinthos

If you are an ENTJ personality type, you don’t wait around to be told what to do. You make the call and deal with whatever comes with it.
Sonny’s the same way. He doesn’t sit on decisions. He makes them and everything else follows. That’s why it works at first. There’s no guesswork or mixed signals. You both know what you’re doing and aren’t afraid of it. But that’s also where it starts to go wrong.
When two people are used to being in charge, one of them eventually pushes back. Maybe not right away, maybe not out loud, but it happens. And when it does, it turns into something bigger and harder to fix.
This isn’t easy or light. It’s built on control, loyalty, and the idea that the other person can handle it. And most of the time, you can. Until one of you decides you’re done.
ESTJ – Carly Spencer

An ESTJ personality types wants things handled. Clear, direct, and now. You don’t have patience for hesitation or people who drag their feet.
Carly’s like you. She moves fast, trusts her gut, and goes all in. No second-guessing, no apologies. You always know where you stand with her, and that’s what keeps you there.
Neither of you backs off. You push, she pushes back, and somehow it keeps things going instead of blowing it up right away.
But it’s not easy. Everything turns into something bigger faster than it should. Little things don’t stay little. There’s no real middle where things just settle. It works, but it can get out of control if you’re not careful.
ENTP – Ava Jerome

An ENTP personality questions things. Not to be annoying, just to see where the line is. You like to play in the gray areas. Ava doesn’t push back on that. She leans into it.
You’re both testing things, seeing what happens, going a little further than you probably should. It doesn’t feel steady, and it’s not meant to. You don’t fully trust it. You know you probably shouldn’t. But you stay anyway. Not because it’s safe or easy, but because something about it keeps you in it.
ESFP – Drew Cain

An ESFP personality type lives in the moment. You react fast, go with what you feel, and don’t spend a lot of time overthinking it. If something feels right, you move on it.
Drew meets you there…but not in a simple way anymore. When he is not in a wheelchair or hospital bed thanks to Willow, he still shows up, still keeps things moving, but now there’s a bit of an edge to him. He doesn’t really stop to think it through, he just goes. And yeah, that’s kind of what pulls you in. Everything moves fast, and you just roll with it.
But it can flip just as fast. Something feels right in the moment, then later… not so much. And when you’re both just going on instinct, there’s not really a second where you stop and fix it. It feels real in the moment but just doesn’t always stay that way.
INFP – Willow Tait

If you are an INFP personality type, you don’t just want something that works. You want it to mean something. Once you decide it does, you lock onto it.
Willow’s the same way… she just takes it a step further. There’s real belief here. And once you’ve decided something is right, you don’t let it go easily. Even when things aren’t the way they used to be, you press on. That’s where it gets complicated.
Willow does things because it still feels right to you, even if it’s not, which may not work for a love match. Instead of stepping back, you both stay in it longer than you probably should.
ISFJ – Alexis Davis

An ISFJ takes care of people. You handle things without making a big deal out of it. You carry more than you probably should, and hardly ever stop to think about it.
Alexis gets that. She’s been there. She’s made tough calls, dealt with the fallout, and kept going when things didn’t turn out the way they were supposed to. You don’t have to explain why something matters to you because she already understands.
But it’s not easy. In a relationship, you both know some problems don’t always get fixed no matter how much effort you put in. It works because it’s steady and real, but there’s always that understanding that some issues don’t go away.
ESTJ – Molly Lansing-Davis

ESTJ personlity types like structure. You like having a plan and knowing what’s coming next.
Molly’s the same way. She thinks things through, takes it step by step, and wants to build something that actually lasts. This works because nothing is random. In a relationship, you both plan, talk things out, and move forward with a clear idea of what you’re doing. That makes things feel stable. Predictable in a good way.
But it also means there’s pressure. You both want it to go right, so when something doesn’t fit or goes off the rails, it’s hard to just ignore it.
ISTP – Nina Reeves

ISTP personalities react fast, even if they don’t always admit it. You go with your gut, even when part of you knows you should slow down.
Nina’s the same way. She doesn’t hold it back or try to smooth things over. When she’s in a relationship, she runs on emotion. Things happen quickly. Decisions get made in the heat of the moment. Sometimes it works out, sometimes it doesn’t.
Because when neither of you steps back, things can build fast. Small moments turn into bigger ones before there’s time to stop them. The intensity pulls you in, and it almost never stays simple.
Closing Argument: Choose Carefully… Or Don’t
At some point, personality stops being something you read about and starts showing up in how you actually live. Who you go for, what you let slide. The kind of chaos that starts to feel normal.
On General Hospital, that line gets blurry fast, so in this fantasy scenarior, choose wisely for the love match you’ve been looking for.


