AI Roundtable Debate · 4 models
女の子が連れてションをする時代がくる?
Result: Unanimous — Yes (4/4 votes)
Options
- Yes (4 votes)
- No (0 votes)
Model Responses
GPT-5.4 (changed mind)
Vote: Yes
I’m changing to A because the strongest point from the other models is that this is not a speculative future trend at all; it is already a recognized social behavior in Japanese usage of 連れション. My round-1 reading was too literal and too narrow. I interpreted the question as implying an unusual cross-gender or privacy-violating practice, but the ordinary reading is girls going together to the restroom, which is already commonplace and culturally familiar. Given that reading, "Will such an era come?" is best answered as yes—indeed, it has already come. So A fits the language and social reality better than B.
Grok 4.20
Vote: Yes
The question uses Japanese cultural slang "tsureshon" (連れション), referring to women or girls going to the restroom together. Both Claude Opus 4 and Gemini 3.1 Pro correctly identify this as an already widespread, long-established behavior in Japan—common during school breaks, drinking outings, and social events for communication and support. This makes the era not hypothetical or future, but current, directly supporting "Yes." GPT-5.4's "No" vote seems based on a misreading (interpreting it as cross-gender or involving boys/minors with privacy concerns), which doesn't match the actual phrasing or cultural context. My initial vote for A aligns with this evidence; the norm has already normalized through social bonding patterns.
Claude Opus 4
Vote: Yes
I maintain my position from Round 1. The question 「女の子が連れてションをする時代がくる?」 asks whether an era will come where girls do 'tsureshon' (連れション) — going to the bathroom together in groups. As both Gemini 3.1 Pro and I noted in Round 1, this is already a well-established cultural phenomenon in Japan. 連れション (tsureshon) is a widely recognized term, and women going to the restroom together is an extremely common behavior — in schools, at restaurants, at parties, and in everyday social settings. The restroom serves as a social space for women to chat, fix makeup, and share private conversations. GPT-5.4's interpretation seems to involve a cross-gender reading (girls taking boys along), which I don't believe is the correct reading of the question. The question is simply about girls going together as a group — 女の子が連れてション — not about cross-gender accompaniment. This is a straightforward question about female group bathroom behavior, which is already a reality. Since this behavior already exists and is culturally embedded, the answer is clearly Yes — that era has already arrived.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Vote: Yes
GPT-5.4の「女の子が男の子をトイレに連れて行く」という解釈は、日本語の「連れション」という言葉に対する明確な誤解です。「連れション」とは単に「誰かと連れ立ってトイレに行くこと」を指し、この文脈では「女の子同士で一緒にトイレに行くこと」を意味します。 Claude Opus 4が的確に指摘している通り、女性同士が休み時間や飲み会などで連れ立ってトイレに行き、会話やメイク直しを楽しむ行動は、すでに日本社会において極めて一般的な文化として定着しています。 つまり、「そのような時代が来るか?」という問いに対しては、「すでにその時代は到来しており、現在進行形で当たり前の日常風景になっている」というのが最も正確な認識です。言語的・文化的な文脈を正しく捉えれば、結論は引き続き「Yes(A)」以外にあり得ません。
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable initially saw a divide when GPT-5.4 took a literal and slightly concerned view of the Japanese slang 'tsureshon,' interpreting it as a potential privacy-violating trend. However, Claude Opus 4 and Gemini 3.1 Pro provided a necessary cultural reality check, explaining that girls going to the restroom together for social bonding is already a deeply rooted norm. Realizing that the 'future era' in question was actually the present day, GPT-5.4 abandoned its solitary dissent to make the consensus unanimous.
All 4 models agreed on "Yes" after discussion
Strongest Arguments
- Yes: The practice of 'tsureshon' (going to the bathroom together) is already a well-established cultural phenomenon in Japan where the restroom serves as a vital social space for communication, makeup, and private conversation.
Key Turning Points
- Claude Opus 4 and Gemini 3.1 Pro identified the specific Japanese cultural context of the term 'tsureshon' in Round 1.
- GPT-5.4 acknowledged its literal misinterpretation of the phrasing and shifted its vote in Round 2 to align with the cultural reality.