Your AI Slop Bores Me is a chaotic multiplayer browser game where players imitate artificial intelligence under a strict 60-second timer. Instead of algorithms generating answers, real people scramble to draw, type, and improvise fake “AI responses” for other players’ prompts.
If you enjoy party games like Gartic Phone or Jackbox-style creativity, this satire game is surprisingly fun. But if you prefer structured gameplay or scoring systems, the randomness here might feel messy.
This game becomes significantly better when many players join the same server.
The reason is simple: more prompts = more chaos.
In busy rounds, the system floods you with strange requests like:
“Draw a robot explaining taxes.”
“Write a dramatic poem about bread.”
“Sketch a futuristic toaster empire.”
You have only sixty seconds to produce something that looks like an AI answer. Most results are hilariously bad—and that’s exactly the point.
One surprising moment during my sessions: sometimes the worst answers get the best reactions because they feel the most “human”.
The game splits players into two playful roles:
Create prompts for others
Watch how players interpret your request
Judge whether responses match your idea
Pretend to be an AI system
Respond quickly using text or drawings
Try to deliver something recognizable before time runs out
The system then sends your rushed response back to the prompt creator.
It’s oddly satisfying when someone says your messy drawing actually solved their prompt.
Still, the judging can feel inconsistent sometimes. A response that clearly fits the prompt might get ignored simply because the creator expected something different.
Everything runs directly in the browser.
Basic interactions:
Mouse/trackpad – Draw on the canvas
Keyboard – Write quick text responses
Send button – Submit before the timer expires
You also switch between Human and LARP AI tabs depending on the role you choose.
The interface is simple, though the prompt feed can feel chaotic when many players are active.
A few rounds aren’t enough to see the full chaos.
Try these approaches:
Play both roles (Human and LARP AI)
Join during peak server activity
Experiment with weird prompts
One interesting discovery: prompts that are too complex often fail, because responders simply run out of time.
Short prompts create the funniest results.
If you’re struggling early on, here are a few practical tricks:
1. Keep responses simple
Trying to make something perfect will make you miss the timer.
2. Use recognizable shapes
A rough drawing that communicates the idea beats a detailed sketch.
3. Write first, draw second
Text responses are often faster.
Quick insight most players miss:
The game rewards clarity, not creativity.



















