102.
I answered yes on every single question in Part I, and only answered no to a single question in Part II (That was abolishing ALL immigration restrictions, while I'm pretty much OK with people who want to come here being allowed to do so, I wouldn't just let someone who is a likely security threat come in, or someone who is wanted for murder or some other similar crime. So I can't quite agree with that.)
Part III gets more tricky. I believe any government that goes beyond police, courts, and defense to be some level of evil, and not a necessary one. However, I believe a government that limits itself to those three functions (And does them in a moral manner, arresting drug dealers, or at least those that deal to adults, is not "Policing", convicting them is not "Judging" and bombing Iran is not "Defense") is in fact a moral good. It doesn't exist though, so every REAL government is an evil, if perhaps a necessary one. So I still answered no on the "Is ALL government evil" question. I was able to make the logical leap that by "Government", its talking about the State, and not something like my church's government or some such, but a State that provides police, courts, and defense certainly qualifies as "Government", just not an evil one, IMO. Same with the "Parasitic elite" part. I think defense, police, and courts, properly provided by government, helps virtually if not absolutely everyone. Its when they go beyond that that they start to be for the benefit of the parasitic elite, which they generally do, but there's nothing INHERENT about that.
So.. 102. "Hard-core libertarian." That sounds about right to me.
I like this test much more than the "World's Smallest Political Quiz", and much, MUCH better than political compas. I like that there's not a single abortion question on this test, because abortion is an issue that libertarians do not agree on. I also like that, unlike the World's Smallest Political Compass, it gets progressively more extreme, rather than being set up so that even a moderate libertarian can basically get a perfect score. I'm not quite a libertarian as Murray Rothbard, but I'm much more so than Gary Johnson, and its approrpriate that the different degrees on the continuum show that.
I'm not a huge fan of the immigration question, since that's one that libertarians don't agree on either, IIRC Rothbard wasn't for 100% unrestricted immigration either (I could be wrong about this) and I know Hans Herman Hoppe wasn't. That question doesn't bother me as much though because I can at least mentally construct why not having government regulate that sort of thing (And for the most part I don't want them to) is more libertarian. Its easy to see why abortion is not a victimless crime, you may not agree,but its easy to understand the logic.
All in all, a very interesting test. I like it.