Are you the revenge, the love, or one of the rot you'd come back for?
24
Questions
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6
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This is an unofficial fan quiz. Not affiliated with Netflix or VIU Studios.
Question 1 of 24
About The Glory
The Glory is Kim Eun-sook writing with the gloves off: a Netflix revenge drama built around Moon Dong-eun, the quiet primary-school teacher played by Song Hye-kyo with almost frightening restraint. As a teenager, Dong-eun was tortured by five wealthy classmates while every adult system around her looked away. Twenty years later, she returns with a life engineered around one purpose: making each abuser understand the cost of what they did. The series pairs her icy long game with a brutal social map of money, status, religion, marriage, medicine, and school politics. Lee Do-hyun's Joo Yeo-jeong becomes the soft-eyed surgeon drawn into her orbit, while Yeom Hye-ran's Hyeon-nam gives the revenge plot its bruised, human pulse as an abused wife who becomes Dong-eun's informant.
What makes The Glory endure is not just the revenge. It is the precision of the moral architecture. The villains are not cartoon monsters; they are adults who learned that cruelty could be protected by class, beauty, family names, and institutional cowardice. Dong-eun's silence is never emptiness. It is discipline, grief, calculation, and a refusal to let time excuse violence. The show understands how abuse echoes through bodies, careers, friendships, marriages, and even the vocabulary people use to describe themselves. Its characters resonate because each one carries a worldview: survival through patience, survival through charm, survival through money, survival through denial, survival through love that arrives too late but still matters.
Meet the Crew
Each result in this quiz is anchored in a real character from The Glory — here's a quick guide to who you might end up matched with.
Moon Dong-eun
The Architect of Revenge
You don't carry it. You aimed it. Twenty years of cold, exact patience went into the architecture you're walking through now. You speak rarely, take notes always, and you have rehearsed every silence you'll ever use. You'd rather lose a small comfort today than miss the precise minute the leverage lands. You love sparingly and dangerously, and you let one person help you carry it only after you'd already spent half a lifetime carrying it entirely alone.
Joo Yeo-jeong
The Soft-Eyed Surgeon
You watch how people treat the person serving them. You sit at the eye level of whoever is hurting and you stay until the sentence is finished. You'd rather be the hand somebody else doesn't have than the hero of any story. You love patiently, with grown-up attention, and you'd carry the sin of somebody you love over your own innocence if it meant they did not have to carry it alone. The white coat is a costume. The watching is the work.
Park Yeon-jin
The Weather-Anchor Queen Bee
You walked into power and you decided power liked you better than morals. You smile on camera, lie in private, and you've never apologized for anything you weren't paid to. You laugh too loud in the rooms you're winning. You keep secrets the way other people keep jewelry: insured, displayed, and absolutely under your name. You'd rather be feared than questioned, and you learned that on purpose, in a classroom, before you'd ever heard the word adult.
Kang Hyeon-nam
The Domestic-Worker Ally
You learn names. You watch hands. You wait. You know the look because you have worn it, and the worst day of your life taught you that the smallest kindness can be the entire turning point. You'd say no twice and yes the third time. You apologize for things that weren't yours, and you're working on it. You're the one who notices when somebody is tired without being told. You stay. That, by itself, is enough of a job for one life.
Lee Sa-ra
The Chaotic Painter
You confuse self-destruction with personality. You confess everything to a priest, a friend, a stranger, your paintings, and you forget all of it by morning. You're a mess and you're honest about it, sometimes, on better days. You drink in chapel, paint in the wrong light, and cry on cue, and somehow that always seems to be enough to be forgiven. You love beautifully when sober. You're sober less often than you'd like to be, and you know it.
Jeon Jae-jun
The Country-Club Heir
You take up more space than you've earned and you've decided the space is yours regardless. You think wanting something is the same as deserving it. You corner the room you walk into. You collect favors and call them loyalty. You don't apologize. If a person needs an apology from you, they're already not in your life. You'd burn a small life to keep a big one. You'd rather be the one who took the hit than the one who flinched, and you have receipts for both.
How This Quiz Works
This quiz works because The Glory runs its character study on revenge-thriller rails. Your result is not about whether you are good, evil, wounded, or clever in some simple way. It is about how you move when power is unfairly distributed: do you endure, expose, protect, manipulate, confess, or strike only when the board is finally yours? A Dong-eun match suggests controlled purpose. A Yeo-jeong match suggests devotion with a dangerous edge. A Hyeon-nam match reveals courage that keeps choosing life under pressure.
At the end, the character you most closely match becomes your result. The match percentage reflects how strongly your answers leaned toward that character versus the runners-up. A high match means your personality clearly fit one archetype; a closer call means you're a blend, which is just as common.
We don't ask for your email, sign-up, or any personal info to see your result. Take the quiz, get your character, share it if you want, and that's it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this quiz spoiler-safe?
Mostly, yes. The questions focus on personality, pressure, loyalty, revenge, and survival rather than specific late-series twists. That said, The Glory is built around abuse, coercion, and long-planned consequences, so the quiz assumes you understand the show's darker emotional territory and 16+ subject matter.
Which result is the rarest?
Moon Dong-eun is usually the hardest result to get because she requires a very specific mix of patience, emotional control, strategic memory, and moral absolutism. Many people share her anger. Fewer share her willingness to spend years turning that anger into architecture.
Why does Moon Dong-eun become a teacher?
Dong-eun becomes a teacher because the classroom is part of her revenge design. Her career places her near the next generation of the people who destroyed her life, especially Park Yeon-jin's daughter. It also sharpens the show's central question: what happens when schools fail to protect children?