Come along on a journey to uncover your inner shadow deity. Are you a Femme Fatale? A Witch? A Vampire? Or something else? This quiz will help empower the dark goddess that resides within you!
Are you ready to begin?
Questions Overview
- On a solitary mountaintop where I can see the stars.
- In a moss-covered cottage in the woods.
- In a looming castle on the moors.
- In a charming beach house by a stormy sea.
- Influence
- Love
- Wisdom
- Independence
- Red
- Gray
- Green
- Purple
- The Magician—a card about resourcefulness, power, and manifestation.
- The Empress—a card about beauty, abundance, and nurturing.
- The Chariot—a card about willpower, control, and determination.
- The Knight of Wands—a card about wealth, independence, and adventure.
- A bear
- A snake
- A tiger
- A raven
- A star
- A sun
- A triangle
- An X
- I’m sarcastic and romantic.
- I’m mischievous and ambitious.
- I’m intellectual and innovative.
- I’m bold and brave.
- A bouquet of fragrant flowers.
- A stuffed animal to hug.
- A moment alone.
- An herbal bath.
- My creativity
- My persuasiveness
- My determination
- My confidence
- I am asleep on an empty battlefield. A tortoise sings a lullaby.
- I am swimming in a bath of crystals under a moonlit sky.
- I am small and riding on a crow’s back as she soars through the air.
- I am doing cartwheels in a field of poppies while my friends laugh and clap.
- My head
- My heart
- My gut
- The universe
- Leo, Gemini, or Sagittarius
- Scorpio, Pisces, or Aquarius
- Aries, Capricorn, or Virgo
- Taurus, Libra, or Cancer
More Quizzes
More About Dark Goddesses
Many cultures around the world have myths about light and dark goddesses. In Greek mythology, for instance, some dark goddesses include Eris, the goddess of chaos; Eileithyia, the goddess of childbirth and labor (we know it sounds positive—just trust us, she’s one bad deity!), and Hecate, the goddess of witchcraft and magic.
However, many goddesses possess both light and dark qualities—for example, Kali, sometimes considered a “dark goddess,” is revered in Hindu spirituality as a goddess of both destruction and creation. And in Celtic mythology, Morrigan, goddess of war and fate, is considered either a bad omen or an empowering one, depending on the situation. Hera, of Roman mythology, is often considered a “light” goddess, but she’s actually very vengeful and vain.
A goddess’s designation as either “light” or “dark” frequently depends on who is telling their story!
Want to learn more?
For more information about goddesses in different cultures, check out these links: