Find your Taylor Sheridan show match with a quick quiz

Discover which Taylor Sheridan show reflects your instincts, from land and legacy to leverage and law

Taylor Sheridan’s screen worlds are built on a handful of recurring themes: power, loyalty, and the high cost of survival. This quick guided quiz lenses those themes into personality outcomes so you can see which fictional landscape feels like home. Each answer maps to an archetype that lives comfortably in moral grey zones and prioritizes results over reputations. Whether you respond to threats with blunt force or careful negotiation, the exercise highlights how you would function in a Sheridan story and why that setting amplifies your strengths.

The format is simple: ten situational prompts probe where your influence comes from, who you protect, and how far you’ll go to keep order. Questions focus on sources of leverage, definitions of loyalty, tolerance for compromise, and the stakes you defend. At the end, four possible outcomes appear: Yellowstone, Landman, Tulsa King, and Mayor of Kingstown. Your dominant answers reveal the show whose moral architecture and daily problems align with your instincts — not necessarily who you are, but who you would be when the chips are down.

The four worlds explained

Each Sheridan environment represents a distinct approach to control and consequence. Yellowstone centers on ancestral authority, the protection of land, and a legacy that demands sacrifices; it rewards a front-line, almost tribal form of leadership. Landman (set amid oil and corporate power) prizes transactional savvy, the ability to read deals, and the willingness to use leverage as a tool. Tulsa King illustrates reinvention and hard-earned respect inside a city that tolerates rough pragmatism. Finally, Mayor of Kingstown dramatizes the management of broken systems, where maintaining fragile order is a skill equal parts diplomacy and cold calculation. The quiz maps your instincts to one of these operational matrices.

Archetypes in action

Yellowstone: land, lineage, and absolute protection

If your answers lean toward protecting a way of life above all else, you belong in Yellowstone. People who fit this world measure success not just in profit but in continuity: the ranch, the name, and a lineage that survives systemic erosion. You demonstrate a leadership style rooted in visible authority and frontline responsibility, acting decisively when tradition or family is threatened. The calculus here is often binary — defend or lose — and your willingness to accept personal cost for the greater preservation of identity makes you a natural Dutton-style figure. In this setting, ferocity and fidelity are virtues.

Landman: deals, leverage, and cold efficiency

Answers that favor negotiation, timing, and financial or legal maneuvering point toward the Landman world. This archetype thrives where value is buried under risk and the right contract or walk-away can reshape power. You prize transactional intelligence and read rooms like maps, understanding who depends on whom and how to convert need into advantage. Emotional attachment is secondary; relationships are instruments when necessary. The oil-field backdrop values clarity and adaptability, and you succeed by being the person others turn to when complex deals need someone unsentimental and brutally competent.

Tulsa King and Mayor of Kingstown

Tulsa King: reinvention and earned respect

If your responses emphasize resilience after exile and a knack for building new orders, Tulsa King is your match. This world suits characters who return from obscurity with reputation and tactics intact, then carve out influence through respect rather than inherited authority. You lead by competence and quiet intimidation, assembling loyal crews that trust you because you proved yourself in impossible circumstances. The setting rewards improvisation and street-level strategy; you win by making choices that legitimate your presence where few expected you to succeed. For those who value earned standing and pragmatism, Tulsa offers the right stage.

Mayor of Kingstown: keeping a rotten system intact

When your choices favor maintaining order in environments with no clean options, you fit the Mayor of Kingstown motif. This archetype operates as an intermediary between law, crime, and politics, fluent in several moral languages and frequently choosing the lesser evil. You are comfortable accepting compromises if they preserve a fragile equilibrium; system management rather than ideological purity defines your work. The role demands endurance, discretion, and the capacity to absorb blame while preventing total collapse. If you thrive where nuance and damage control matter most, this is the setting where your skills matter.

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Sarah Palmer

Home & tech editor, 9 years. Interior design diploma (KLC). Smart home and design trends.