Dante's Inferno Test.

Were you actualy planning to go there?
 
Where? To heaven? Not exactly, I was more planning to be destroyed when I died (just a hope :D) so neither God nor Devil would have to put up with the madness that is moi. But is there one of these for heaven was my original question. 'Will I ever get an answer?' is my new one. :D
 
The Tempting Tomato has been placed in Purgatory. Be grateful for this fate, fellow hellmates! :D
 
Level 4-
Just before the river Styx is the Fourth Level of Hell. Here, the prodigal and the avaricious suffer their punishment, as they roll weights back and forth against one another. You will share eternal damnation with others who either wasted and lived greedily and insatiably, or who stockpiled their fortunes, hoarding everything and sharing nothing. Plutus, the wolf-like demon of wealth, dwells here.
 
City of Dis... guess it's about right.
 
You have escaped damnation and made it to Purgatory, a place where the dew of repentance washes off the stain of sin and girds the spirit with humility. Through contrition, confession, and satisfaction by works of righteousness, you must make your way up the mountain. As the sins are cleansed from your soul, you will be illuminated by the Sun of Divine Grace, and you will join other souls, smiling and happy, upon the summit of this mountain. Before long you will know the joys of Paradise as you ascend to the ethereal realm of Heaven.

:D
 
I answered more questions this time, and found interesting results...

However I did not answer the most proactive unsure questions, so it still might be somewhat false. I'm still in Level 1:

First Level of Hell - Limbo

Charon ushers you across the river Acheron, and you find yourself upon the brink of grief's abysmal valley. You are in Limbo, a place of sorrow without torment. You encounter a seven-walled castle, and within those walls you find rolling fresh meadows illuminated by the light of reason, whereabout many shades dwell. These are the virtuous pagans, the great philosophers and authors, unbaptised children, and others unfit to enter the kingdom of heaven. You share company with Caesar, Homer, Virgil, Socrates, and Aristotle. There is no punishment here, and the atmosphere is peaceful, yet sad.
 
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