The Big Five (also called OCEAN or the Five Factor Model) describes personality with five broad traits rather than a single type. CharacterDex shows it for fun — it's entertainment framing, not a diagnosis.
Instead of one label, the Big Five places a character on five independent scales: Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Neuroticism (the OCEAN traits). Because it's continuous rather than a set of codes, there's no fixed list of types to browse — you'll see Big Five notes on individual character pages.
Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Neuroticism — the five Big Five traits. CharacterDex shows these for entertainment, never as a clinical score.
The Big Five is measured on sliding scales, not as fixed codes, so there are no type cohorts to browse. Look for Big Five notes on character profiles instead.
MBTI gives you one of 16 codes; the Big Five places you on five separate scales. Both are shown here as community opinion, for fun.
Just so you know: Every type here is community opinion shown with its vote count, never a clinical verdict.