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Retake
Questions
0 of 28 answered
1
Launching a large fan project, you:
A
Define roles, deadlines, and a clear execution plan from day one.
B
Start with a vision and let it evolve as people contribute ideas.
2
At a K-pop themed hangout/party, you:
A
Host mode—plan games, themes, timing, playlists, and a clean flow.
B
Vibe mode—let the room decide; spontaneous fun beats a strict plan.
3
Your bias starts a surprise IG Live. What do you do first?
A
Jump into chat, react a lot, and hype up the moment with everyone.
B
Watch quietly, take it in, and maybe leave one thoughtful comment later.
4
Fans say a newer member is being overshadowed. You first:
A
Look at evidence—screen time, lines, scheduling, measurable patterns.
B
Think about morale and group dynamics—how it feels and affects them.
5
A teaser drops with a totally new concept. Your reaction is:
A
Compare to prior eras and predict what this change means practically.
B
Get excited about possibilities and theories—let them surprise you.
6
A controversy starts trending about your group. You first:
A
Look for reliable info and context before reacting—facts first.
B
Worry about the members and how they’re feeling—people first.
7
After a stressful day, your K-pop reset looks like:
A
Watch variety clips, talk to fandom friends, share memes, stay social.
B
Headphones on—music, lyrics, and quiet time with your comfort content.
8
You’re making fan content for a project. You lean toward:
A
Go for accuracy—faces, outfits, stage references, recognizable details.
B
Go for meaning—symbolic, stylized, or concept-driven expression.
9
You see misinformation about your group spreading. You:
A
Correct it with verified sources or official statements, clean and direct.
B
Correct it gently to avoid piling on—clarify without escalating.
10
On first watch of a new MV, you naturally focus on:
A
Concrete details—styling, sets, choreo changes, little production choices.
B
The big concept—storyline, symbolism, themes, and the overall mood.
11
You spot your bias at an airport or hotel lobby. You:
A
Keep it respectful, but you might wave or say a quick hello if appropriate.
B
Keep your distance and just appreciate the moment without approaching.
12
Picking a leader for a fan project, you prefer someone who:
A
Keeps decisions clear and efficient; ships results with minimal drama.
B
Protects harmony; makes sure everyone feels heard and supported.
13
You join a comeback streaming/voting team. You prefer to:
A
Coordinate and rally people—roles, reminders, momentum.
B
Handle a solid piece quietly—guides, receipts, edits, behind-the-scenes.
14
At a K-pop trivia night, you usually win by:
A
Recalling facts—dates, tracklists, awards, numbers, exact members/roles.
B
Connecting themes—eras, concepts, vibes, and “how it all fits together.”
15
Fan discourse gets heated in your timeline. You:
A
De-escalate with logic—clarify misunderstandings and propose a fair fix.
B
De-escalate with empathy—validate feelings and steer people toward respect.
16
A new MV drops. Your viewing style is:
A
Set it up—teasers, snacks, watch party, then rewatch to analyze details.
B
Hit play instantly—experience first, process later, no overthinking.
17
You join a dance cover team. Your role is usually:
A
Structure the practice—schedule, goals, counts, and accountability.
B
Keep it loose—practice when free and adapt as the team’s energy shifts.
18
Before a big concert day, you’re the type to:
A
Plan everything—timing, outfit, transit, merch budget, meetups, checklist.
B
Keep it flexible—go with the flow and grab opportunities as they happen.
19
Learning a dance cover, you improve fastest by:
A
Practice specific counts and angles until it’s clean and exact.
B
Catch the groove first, then refine—feel drives the precision later.
20
When you hear a new track, your brain goes to:
A
Analyze structure—hooks, ad-libs, arrangement, vocal layers, rap flow.
B
Get pulled into vibe—emotion, atmosphere, and what it makes you imagine.
21
You notice a member seems overwhelmed lately. You:
A
Offer practical help—resources, boundaries, solutions, actionable support.
B
Offer emotional support—encouragement, reassurance, kindness, comfort.
22
You’re introducing someone to your ult group. You:
A
Make it an event—playlist, top 3 MVs, funniest clips, you guide the experience.
B
Give a few tailored recs and let them explore; you answer questions if they ask.
23
A comeback poster is full of symbols and clues. You:
A
Zoom in on each clue and build a logical “poster theory” from details.
B
Absorb the big idea and mood first; the details can unfold later.
24
Organizing a fan chant, your process is:
A
Write a clean guide, practice it, then publish a final “official” version.
B
Collect ideas, iterate with feedback, and finalize closer to the event.
25
At a concert, your “best moment” is usually:
A
Being in the thick of it—singing along, dancing, and feeding off the crowd.
B
Locking in from your spot—absorbing every detail and enjoying it calmly.
26
A member announces a mental health break. You mainly:
A
Consider logistics—how schedules change and what support systems can help.
B
Lead with care—support messages and encouragement to reduce pressure.
27
Your group opens a fan call Q&A. You:
A
Ask a question or leave a comment right away—shoot your shot.
B
Read the room first, then maybe interact if it feels right.
28
Rehearsing for a fan performance, you prefer:
A
Work a plan—repeat sections, track progress, polish step by step.
B
Experiment—try different parts, adjust on the fly, and refine late.
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