Fun Facts

Recent Content

The Secret Formula That Controls Your Financial Life

The Secret Formula That Controls Your Financial Life

A private company's secret algorithm decides if you get a house, a car, or a loan — and almost nobody knows exactly how it works.

Read more
This Country Had No Government for 589 Days — and Nobody Cared

This Country Had No Government for 589 Days — and Nobody Cared

Belgium went 589 days without an elected government — and life barely changed. No chaos, no collapse. Just street parties and free beer.

Read more
How Big Water Made Tap Water the Enemy

How Big Water Made Tap Water the Enemy

The bottled water industry spent billions convincing you tap water is dangerous. The truth about what's actually in that bottle will shock you.

Read more
The Dark and Bloody Origin of the Teddy Bear

The Dark and Bloody Origin of the Teddy Bear

The world's most beloved children's toy was born from a brutal hunting trip, a political cartoon, and a bear that was clubbed unconscious and tied to a tree.

Read more
The Disturbing Truth About How Memory Actually Works

The Disturbing Truth About How Memory Actually Works

Researchers have successfully implanted entirely false memories into real people's minds. The scary part? The subjects were completely convinced they were real.

Read more
See All Content

Why Japanese People Believe Blood Type Determines Personality

In Japan, asking someone's blood type is as common as asking their zodiac sign in America. But it's not just casual conversation—companies have asked for blood types in job interviews, dating apps match couples by blood compatibility, and people blame bad behavior on being "type B." This pseudoscientific belief has zero evidence behind it, yet it shapes hiring decisions, relationships, and daily life for millions.

The practice is called "ketsueki-gata," and surveys show that 99% of Japanese people know their blood type. According to the theory, type A people are organized but anxious, type B are creative but selfish, type O are confident but stubborn, and type AB are mysterious and logical. These personality profiles are treated with the same seriousness Americans give Myers-Briggs tests—except with actual consequences.

The belief started in 1927 when psychologist Takeji Furukawa published "The Study of Temperament Through Blood Type." His research used laughably small sample sizes and no statistical controls, but it caught on anyway. The Japanese military even used blood type to organize soldiers during WWII, convinced that certain blood types made better fighters.

The practice faded after the war but roared back in the 1970s when journalist Masahiko Nomi published bestselling books on blood type personalities. One book sold over 5 million copies. TV shows started featuring daily blood type horoscopes. Magazines published compatibility charts. The pseudoscience became so embedded in culture that questioning it seemed strange.

The discrimination is real and has a name: "bura-hara" (blood type harassment). People with type B blood are stereotyped as selfish and difficult, affecting their job prospects and relationships. Some companies have been caught grouping employees by blood type or assigning work based on perceived blood type traits. Schools have reportedly separated students by blood type.

Dating culture is particularly affected. Women's magazines publish romantic compatibility guides based on blood type. Dating agencies cater to blood type preferences. People have ended relationships after discovering their partner's "incompatible" blood type. It's astrology, but treated like a legitimate personality assessment.

The scientific community has thoroughly debunked this. Multiple studies show blood type explains less than 0.3% of personality variation—statistically meaningless. Any perceived correlation is likely due to self-fulfilling prophecy: people learn their blood type's stereotype and unconsciously adopt those traits.

Yet the belief persists. Morning TV shows feature blood type segments. Celebrities' blood types are listed on their Wikipedia pages. Product marketing sometimes targets specific blood types—blood type-themed bath salts, drinks, and even condoms have been sold in Japan.

The phenomenon isn't unique to Japan. South Korea and Taiwan have adopted similar beliefs, though not as intensely. But Japan remains the epicenter, where something as arbitrary as blood type can influence your career trajectory and love life.

Here's the irony: blood type actually does affect some health risks. Research suggests certain blood types have slightly different susceptibilities to specific diseases. But personality? There's absolutely no biological mechanism that could link blood antigens to behavior, mood, or temperament.

The Japanese government has tried to combat blood type discrimination. Official warnings tell employers not to ask about blood type in interviews, but many still do. The practice is so normalized that many people don't even recognize it as discrimination.

Blood type personality theory persists because it's culturally embedded, not because it's true. It provides easy explanations for complex human behavior, gives people something to bond over, and offers a sense of identity. The same reasons astrology thrives in Western culture.

The difference? In Japan, this pseudoscience has real consequences for employment, education, and relationships. It's not just harmless fun when your blood type determines whether you get hired.

Related Content

Fun Facts

05 March 2026

Post

This Country Had No Government for 589 Days — and Nobody Cared

Belgium went 589 days without an elected government — and life barely changed. No chaos, no collapse. Just street parties and free beer....

Fun Facts

06 March 2026

Post

How Big Water Made Tap Water the Enemy

The bottled water industry spent billions convincing you tap water is dangerous. The truth about what's actually in that bottle will shock you....

Fun Facts

08 March 2026

Post

The Disturbing Truth About How Memory Actually Works

Researchers have successfully implanted entirely false memories into real people's minds. The scary part? The subjects were completely convinced they were real....

Fun Facts

09 March 2026

Post

Why You Always Wake Up Before You Hit the Ground

That falling dream that jolts you awake every time? Your brain is doing something fascinating — and scientists have finally figured out why....

Fun Facts

10 March 2026

Post

Humans Are the Only Animals That Blush — and Nobody Knows Why

Darwin spent his entire career trying to explain why humans blush. He failed. Scientists today still can't fully explain it — and that mystery goes deep....

Fun Facts

11 March 2026

Post

Why You're Probably Terrible at Spotting Lies

The "tells" you rely on to catch liars? Science says they're mostly myths — and your lie-detection ability is barely better than a coin flip....

Fun Facts

13 March 2026

Post

The Island Where Visitors Are Legally Allowed to Be Killed

North Sentinel Island's inhabitants have rejected outside contact for 60,000 years — and the government made it legal for them to kill anyone who tries....

Fun Facts

14 March 2026

Post

Why Your Nose Runs When You Cry (Your Face Is Weirder Than You Think)

When you cry, your nose runs — but it's not what you think. Your eyes and nose share a drainage system, and the explanation is genuinely bizarre....

Fun Facts

15 March 2026

Post

How Napster Broke the Music Industry — Then Accidentally Saved It

Napster nearly destroyed the music industry. But the chaos it caused forced a digital transformation that made the industry more money than it ever made before....

Fun Facts

16 March 2026

Post

Why You Can't Remember Being a Baby (And Why the Answer Is Stranger Than You Think)

You were learning constantly as a baby — so why can't you remember any of it? The neuroscience behind childhood amnesia is far stranger than you'd expect....

Fun Facts

25 March 2026

Post

Why Eyewitness Testimony Is Basically Junk Science

Eyewitness testimony is the most persuasive evidence in court — and one of the least reliable. Science has known this for decades....

Fun Facts

26 March 2026

Post

Why Only 10% of People Are Left-Handed

Left-handers have been exactly 10% of the population for 5,000 years. The evolutionary reason why involves combat, language, and the brain....

Fun Facts

27 March 2026

Post

The Drug You've Been Taking Every Day Since Childhood

Caffeine blocks your brain's tiredness signals, causes physical dependence, and produces clinical withdrawal. Most people have taken it since childhood....

Fun Facts

28 March 2026

Post

Why Your Brain Won't Let You Forget Embarrassing Moments

Your brain archives embarrassing moments with brutal clarity — and replaying them makes them worse. The neuroscience behind it is almost comforting....

Fun Facts

29 March 2026

Post

The Real Reason You Keep Following the Wrong People

Confidence and competence are barely related — but your brain treats them as the same thing. The consequences of that reach further than most people realize....
Terms and ConditionsDo Not Sell or Share My Personal InformationPrivacy PolicyPrivacy NoticeAccessibility NoticeUnsubscribe
Copyright © 2026 Fun Fact Feed