30 iconic horror characters, ranked by how smart their survival decisions actually are. Micah scored lower than a 6-year-old. The data doesn't care.
One killed an alien queen with a forklift. The other killed three hitmen with a blender. The bracket makes difficult choices.
15 matchups — sorted by rank. Click to expand head-to-head stats and commentary.
Which character are you? Be honest. Nobody's watching. (Except us. We're watching.)
The Horror Movie Survival IQ Index scores 30 iconic horror characters across 6 behavioral metrics, each scored 1–10 by rubric against film canon. Final score = average of 6 metrics × 10. Maximum possible score: 100.
| Metric | Abbr | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Situational Awareness | SA | How quickly and accurately they recognize danger. Do they trust their gut, or do they keep telling themselves it's probably nothing? |
| Decision Quality | DQ | Are their in-the-moment choices logical? Go upstairs or toward the exit? |
| Weapon Proficiency | WP | Do they arm themselves? Do they double-tap? Do they drop the gun? |
| Group Leadership | GL | Do they coordinate others effectively, or do they split the party and get someone killed? |
| Final Outcome | FO | Cold hard result. 10 = survived + saved others. 1 = died in a way that was entirely their own doing. |
| Panic Resistance | PR | Do they freeze and scream into the void, or convert fear into action within a reasonable amount of time? |
Jack Torrance: Scored as written. Low DQ (2) and GL (1) reflect moral failure, not cognitive failure. The index does not distinguish between evil and stupid — it scores the behavior. He chased his family with an axe. That is a 1 in Group Leadership.
Georgie: He is six years old. The methodology does not adjust for age. He scored a 16.7. We acknowledge this is unfair. We post the number anyway.
Composite archetypes (Generic Blonde, Let's Split Up Guy, Runs Upstairs): represent recurring horror film behavior patterns, not characters from a single film.
Film canon (primary); IMDb, Fandom wikis, TV Tropes, Horror Homeroom, WhatCulture, CBR, Collider. Collection date: March 2026.
The horror genre has a dirty secret: "final girl" status is not a competency metric. The monster doesn't pick victims based on intelligence — it picks based on screenplay requirements. But if you strip away the plot armor, the jump scares, and the "she had to go back for her phone" scene, and you score these characters on actual, measurable survival behavior? The results are uncomfortable.
We scored 30 characters across 6 clinical metrics: Situational Awareness, Decision Quality, Weapon Proficiency, Group Leadership, Final Outcome, and Panic Resistance. Each 1–10. No supernatural adjustments. No genre exemptions. Ash Williams came out mid-tier. Micah from Paranormal Activity came out below a literal child. The data doesn't care about your headcanon.
Click any matchup below to see the head-to-head metric breakdown. The commentary is included for free. You're welcome.