Skip to content

Which The Wilds Character Are You?

Welcome to wild world of 'The Wilds.' It is a show about young women stuck on deserted island. Each one has her own quirks and stories. Want to know which one you are most like? Dive into their lives with our fun quiz. Discover hidden strengths, reveal secrets and see which character from 'The Wilds' fits you best. Just scroll down and hit Start to kick off your adventure!

Welcome to Quiz: Which The Wilds Character Are You?

‘The Wilds’ pulls you into a gripping survival story. A bunch of teenage girls from different backgrounds crash-land on a remote island. They fight to survive while facing their pasts. Friendships form, alliances shift and drama unfolds. With strong characters and twisty plots, it explores identity and sisterhood. ‘The Wilds’ is a must-watch that keeps you guessing. You won’t want to miss it!

Meet the characters from The Wilds

Fatin Jadmani

Okay, Fatin is that quietly fierce friend you both want and fear to argue with — so grounded and stubborn and also secretly dramatic? She’s practical to the bone, always trying to keep everyone fed and organized, but like, she will also explode into this poetic rant about fairness at 2 a.m. (and yes she can be unexpectedly sentimental about a scarf, don’t ask). She’s the kind of person who makes plans and then breaks them because a better moral choice popped up — which is simultaneously infuriating and heroic. Also, tiny detail: she claims she hates rom-coms but will watch them if someone needs cheering up; I’m not saying she cries, but there’s definitely soggy popcorn involved.

Dot Campbell

Dot is the moral compass who also hoards crayons — no, seriously, she’s outrageously earnest and lovable, and she carries this fierce faith that’s both comforting and slightly intimidating. She’s maternal in a way that makes you roll your eyes and then immediately ask her for advice about life or a band-aid. There’s a stubborn streak too: she’ll pray, plan, and then prank you with a surprising dose of dry humor when you least expect it. Also, fun fact maybe: she likes spreadsheets? Or was that a list of hymns — memory is fuzzy but she definitely labels things.

Martha Blackburn

Martha is chaos wrapped in privilege with a velvety exterior that hides a very loud, very confused interior (and sometimes a slightly evil eyebrow raise). She’s quick, a bit manipulative, but also heartbreakingly lonely — like someone who learned how to perform emotions perfectly and then forgot how to feel them. She oscillates between being bossy and being painfully vulnerable, which makes you want to shake her and also hug her at 3 a.m. One minute she’s sipping something expensive and rolling her eyes, the next she’s sobbing over a cat she swore she didn’t like — it’s messy and brilliant.

Rachel Reid

Rachel is combustible and magnetic, a walking hair-flip with a hint of self-sabotage and a surprising depth if you’re paying attention. She’s the loud one who refuses to be quiet, but there’s tender trauma under the sass, and sometimes she’ll surprise you by being the most honest person in the room. She’s dramatic in that delightful “I could be a movie” way, but also soaked in real grief and sharp instincts — complicated, in other words. Also she has a knack for bad decisions that somehow turn into legendary stories later, which is either tragic or iconic depending on the day.

Nora Reid

Nora gives you small-town steadiness with a stubborn streak like a mule, and also this soft, steady loyalty that feels like home (or a very stubborn plant that refuses to die). She’s gentle but not weak — she’ll hold your hand and then quietly fix the problem without making a scene, which is maybe why you keep relying on her. She can be hilariously literal and occasionally awkward with feelings, but that earnestness is the whole point; she’s an emotional rock who also eats cereal at midnight for comfort. Oh and she’s suspiciously good at remembering everyone’s birthdays — file that away.

Toni Shalifoe

Toni is blunt, razor-smart, and has this compact intensity like a coiled spring — she says what she thinks and it usually bangs like a drum. She’s practical, suspicious, fiercely loyal, and low-key terrified of being vulnerable, which makes her vibe kind of deliciously dangerous and also secretly sweet. She likes control and strategy (sometimes to the point of being infuriating), but she’ll almost always put the crew before her pride — even if she rants about it first. Little contradiction: she pretends not to care about snacks but will absolutely demolish someone’s bag of chips in under five minutes if given the chance.

Leah Rilke

Leah is the quiet, moody artist who looks like she stepped out of a music video and then apologized for it — broody, reserved, deeply feeling things where most people don’t. She’s observant to a fault, keeps secrets like treasure, and says so little that when she does speak it lands like a meteor. She comes off aloof but is secretly the one cataloguing everyone’s weird habits (and laughing about them later), which is honestly the best kind of friend-espionage. Also, random: she draws little doodles on things she shouldn’t, like textbooks, but will deny it with extreme passion.