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Which ‘Love, Victor’ Character Are You?

Love, Victor. Ever heard of it? Sure you have. Now, you can find out which character you are most like. Just answer some questions. Easy, right? Click that shiny start button. Let's dive into your personality.

Welcome to Quiz: Which 'Love, Victor' Character Are You

So, what’s Love, Victor about? It’s a high school drama. Victor, a kid, is figuring out his sexuality. He faces new school, new friends and all that awkwardness. It’s like Love, Simon’s younger sibling. Identity, self-discovery, acceptance. You know, all that warm and fuzzy stuff. So relatable, it might just make you cry. Or laugh. Or both.

Meet the characters from Love, Victor

Victor Salazar

Oh man, Victor is such a glorious mess of nerves and bravery all mashed into one awkwardly adorable human. He’s curious, creative (like he has a whole playlist in his head and also loses his phone in the couch), and trying to figure out what he wants while accidentally being very lovable about it. He overthinks everything and then surprises you by doing something impulsive and kind — classic Vic energy. Honestly, he feels like the heart of the show, fumbling forward and making it work, even when he swears he’ll fail.

Lake Meriwether

Lake is this fierce, stylish tornado of confidence who also hoards emotional baggage like it’s vintage clothing (which she probably does). She’s sharp, protective of her friends, and ready with a biting one-liner, but she also has these tiny soft moments where she’s secretly worried — very human, very real. She acts like she doesn’t care but will absolutely pull you out of a crisis at 2 a.m., then ghost you the next day for dramatic effect. Honestly, she’s complicated in the best way and kind of impossible not to watch.

Andrew

Andrew is loud in the best possible way — big personality, big gestures, kind of chaotic but in a fun-mascot-for-your-life way. He’s dramatic, hyperbolic, and probably narrates his whole day like it’s a rom-com blooper reel (and sometimes it is). Beneath the performative bits there’s a surprisingly sincere, loyal friend who will defend people fiercely, even if he cries about it later, like, a lot. He’s both exhausting and comforting, which is a weird combo but it works.

Benjamin Campbell

Benji is the cinnamon-roll energy of the group — sweet, earnest, and adorably awkward in a way that makes you smile. He’s thoughtful, tries really hard to be a good friend/partner, and overanalyzes things in that cute anxious way (will text back? will it be weird?). He’s low-key brave too, in the way that matters: honesty, vulnerability, small consistent kindnesses. Also, he bakes or hums or something calming — or he claims he can cook; either way, very wholesome.

Mia Brooks

Mia is the go-getter friend who’s equal parts sarcastic and deeply protective — she will plan your life and clap when you actually follow through. She’s practical, snarky, and somehow emotionally intelligent while also making very questionable hair choices (I mean, she looks great but also vibes). She’d roll her eyes at a drama but then create five spreadsheets to fix it, which is both heroic and a tiny bit terrifying. Underneath the sarcasm there’s a big heart; she just hides it with one-liners and iced coffee.

Isabel Salazar

Isabel is that responsible older-sibling vibe — level-headed, fierce when she needs to be, and often the unofficial parent. She’s studious and practical but will also randomly be sentimental and cry at commercials (contradiction alert!). She cares fiercely about family and has a soft, stubborn streak that makes her quietly heroic. Sometimes she lectures you, sometimes she makes you feel seen — same character, different moods, which is kind of the point.

Armando Salazar

Armando is the traditional-but-tender dad who tries to hold everything together and occasionally loses his keys and his temper in equal measure. He’s hardworking, proud, sometimes a bit old-school, but you can see how much he loves his family in tiny protective actions that are both sweet and hilariously awkward. He mixes stern lectures with surprise warm gestures (like making a weird dinner that somehow works). He’s real, flawed, stubborn, and utterly rooted in trying to do right by his kids — even if he messes up.

Felix Weston

Felix is flamboyant, loud, and somehow also the most steady emotional anchor — he brings the drama and also the clean-up crew. He flirts with chaos, loves deeply, and says exactly what everyone else is thinking, which is both dangerous and necessary. He can be mercilessly funny and then turn around and be the softest person in the room; mood swings? maybe, but in a good way. He’s brave, messy, impulsive, and has a surprisingly tender backbone.

Pilar Salazar

Pilar is the warm, no-nonsense matriarch type who feeds everyone and tells you to sit down like it’s a command from the universe. She’s full of sayings, recipes, and low-key conspiracies about love, and she’ll guilt you with kindness (and cookies). Fiercely protective, endlessly practical, and somehow also the one who notices the tiniest things about people’s moods. She’s the kind of character who anchors scenes with love and a little bit of sternness — totally essential.

Adrian Salazar

Adrian is quiet, observant, and easy to underestimate — but don’t. He’s thoughtful, has this soft intensity, and sometimes says almost nothing while meaning everything. He’s the type who keeps his emotions close but acts in ways that show he cares, which drives people crazy and also makes him kind of mysterious. He can be moody one second and unexpectedly goofy the next, which is both confusing and adorable.