I've sunk my teeth into the 'Percy Jackson' corner of the internet enough to map out where people actually post custom cabin quizzes, and honestly there are a few clear hotspots. The big, obvious ones are user-friendly quiz platforms: Quotev and BuzzFeed let creators design personality-style quizzes with images and share links easily. Playbuzz (now often seen under various quiz-builder brands) and ProProfs offer similar templates if you want slick layouts and embedded media. For quick, no-frills quizzes that still feel personal, Google Forms and Typeform are favorites — they’re simple to make, mobile-friendly, and easy to drop into Discord or Tumblr posts.
Beyond general quiz builders, the fandom hubs are where these quizzes catch fire. Tumblr (still alive for fandom content even if quieter), Reddit communities like r/percyjackson and r/HPfanfiction-adjacent spaces, and dedicated Facebook groups are excellent for sharing with engaged readers. Quotev doubles as a storytelling/quiz platform where many people create 'Which cabin are you?' pieces and tag them for discovery. Wattpad occasionally hosts interactive quizzes attached to character lists or short stories. For more immediate, chatty formats, Discord servers and Amino communities host quizzes via bots or pinned links — those often get the most enthusiastic responses because people love comparing results in real time.
If you want maximum visibility, crosspost: put your quiz on Quotev or BuzzFeed, make a thread on Reddit, drop a link in a Tumblr post with the right tags, and pin it in Discord. Tag with 'Percy Jackson', 'camp', 'cabin', and relevant character names; use eye-catching cover art (fan art with permission or royalty-free images) and list the quiz rules and expected time to complete. A few technical tips: make sure your images are optimized for mobile, keep question count reasonable (10–15 is a sweet spot), and add share buttons or a copyable embed so people can repost. I've seen some creators host leaderboard-style quizzes on Kahoot or integrate them into YouTube community posts, too, which is a fun way to gather live reactions. Above all, people love quizzes that feel personal and playful — quirky choices, humor, and a dash of lore go a long way. I still get a kick when someone posts their cabin results in a fandom thread; it's like watching little mythic identities take shape online.
2026-02-02 13:01:55
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