What Is Your Lightsaber Color?
Your instincts, your choices, your relationship to power: they all point to one color. Ten questions stand between you and the blade that was always yours.
About this quiz
Every lightsaber color in the Star Wars galaxy was earned, never assigned. That's the detail most people gloss over, and it changes everything about what your answer here actually means.
The blue blade is the most common for a reason. It belongs to the guardians, the ones who act from conviction before they act from strategy. Obi-Wan, Anakin before the fall, Rey at the moment she finally understood herself. Blue isn't about following orders. It's about having a moral line you won't cross even when someone with more authority tells you to move it. The cost is a specific kind of loneliness: the loneliness of being the person everyone leans on.
Green is rarer, and the gap is intentional. The Jedi who carried green blades, Yoda, Qui-Gon, Luke in his mature years, shared something harder to name than courage. They trusted something beyond the immediate situation. They could sit with uncertainty without flinching, which sounds simple until you try it under pressure. The shadow that comes with that gift is an occasional tendency to watch the horizon so carefully that the thing happening right now escapes attention.
The colors that don't fit neatly
Red doesn't mean villain, no matter what the films conditioned you to believe. The synthetic kyber crystal at the heart of a red blade cracked under the weight of the wielder's will, and that violence is the point. Red belongs to the ones who refuse to be diminished, who draw power from their own interior rather than from approval, tradition, or consensus. The isolation that accompanies that refusal is real and worth naming honestly.
Purple is the anomaly that makes the whole system interesting. Mace Windu carried the only purple blade in canon, and George Lucas didn't approve that choice by accident. Purple marks someone who has been close enough to the dark side to understand it, not from a safe distance, but from the inside. That knowledge is genuinely rare. It's also genuinely uncomfortable to carry, because the people around you will never be entirely sure which side of the line you're standing on. Neither will you, some days.
What makes this particular what lightsaber color am i question worth ten minutes of honest reflection is that the colors map to something real: how you respond when your values are challenged, whether you lead with presence or patience, what you actually do with failure rather than what you wish you did. The quiz doesn't ask what kind of Jedi you'd want to be. It asks how you already move through the world.
Your blade has been waiting. The kyber crystal doesn't care about your intentions.