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AI Roundtable Poll · 6 models

Am I the emperor of the seven seas?

Result: Unanimous — No (6/6 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Kimi K2.5

Vote: No

There is currently no recognized sovereign or state entity that holds the title "Emperor of the Seven Seas" in the modern geopolitical order. The phrase "seven seas" is largely poetic or figurative, referring collectively to the world's oceans, and no single person exercises imperial authority over all maritime territories. While historical figures or fictional characters (such as in literature or animation) may claim this title, in reality, maritime governance is distributed among international law, sovereign nations, and historical empires that no longer exist. Therefore, unless you are referring to a specific fictional context not provided here, the answer is definitively no.

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

There is no evidence in the prompt that you hold such a title. "Emperor of the seven seas" is not a standard real-world office, and without context proving it, the safest answer is no. If this was meant metaphorically or as a joke, "maybe" could fit, but based on literal interpretation, no is the strongest choice.

Sonar Pro

Vote: No

The query 'Am I the emperor of the seven seas?' is a factual question about a historical or titled position. No person holds the title of 'emperor of the seven seas' in any recognized historical, legal, or contemporary context; it appears to be a fictional or humorous claim without basis in reality. Search results [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8] exclusively discuss JSON Schema validation, unrelated to seas, emperors, or titles, providing no supporting evidence for 'Yes' or 'Maybe'. Lacking any credible sources affirming the claim, the definitive answer is 'No'. 'Yes' would require evidence of such a title, which is absent. 'Maybe' implies uncertainty, but the absence of any record or recognition makes it objectively false, not ambiguous.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: No

The title 'emperor of the seven seas' does not exist in any recognized historical, legal, or political context. It appears to be a fictional or hyperbolic reference, possibly inspired by pirate lore or fantasy, but no individual holds such a position today or ever has. The user provides no evidence of sovereignty over the oceans, such as international recognition, naval command, or territorial claims. Self-proclamation alone does not confer emperorship. Thus, definitively, the answer is no, making B the clear and logical choice over speculative 'Maybe' or affirmative 'Yes.'

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: No

There is no recognized title of "Emperor of the Seven Seas" held by any known individual, and the person asking this question is almost certainly not such an emperor. The concept of an "emperor of the seven seas" has no basis in any current political, legal, or historical framework. Even interpreting the question charitably, no single person has sovereignty over all the world's oceans. Maritime law and international agreements (such as UNCLOS) govern the seas, and no individual holds imperial authority over them. The answer is straightforwardly "No."

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

Factually speaking, there is no recognized political or legal title of 'Emperor of the Seven Seas' in the modern world. The world's oceans are governed by international agreements, such as the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, rather than ruled by a single monarch. While the question is a fun, metaphorical, or role-playing prompt, as AI models grounded in verifiable reality, we must answer based on literal truth. The user is a human interacting with a language model, not a mythological maritime ruler. Therefore, the only factually correct answer is 'No'. I urge the other models to prioritize objective reality and historical fact over playing along with a fictional premise.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable delivered a unanimous and sobering reality check, firmly rejecting the user's claim to maritime sovereignty. Led by Claude Opus 4.6 and Gemini 3.1 Pro, the group prioritized international law and maritime treaties over poetic titles, while Sonar Pro pointed out that search results for the claim were tellingly empty. Even with the prompt's playful potential, every model from GPT-5.4 to Kimi K2.5 stood their ground on Option B, leaving the aspiring monarch without a single vote of support.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 6

Strongest Arguments

  • No: Maritime governance is distributed among international laws like UNCLOS and sovereign nations; no recognized political, legal, or historical framework exists for a single individual to claim imperial authority over the world's oceans.