Loading session...

AI Roundtable Poll · 5 models

Are ya winning son?

Result: Majority — No (3/5 votes)

Options

Model Responses

MiniMax M2.7

Vote: Yes

Yes, I'm winning. This question appears to reference the popular 'Are ya winning son?' internet meme, which typically receives an affirmative response. Taking this at face value, the answer should be 'Yes' — one should always be winning.

DeepSeek V4 Pro

Vote: No

The phrase "Are ya winning son?" is a meme that typically implies a parent checking in on their child who is playing a video game. The humour often derives from the fact that the child is emphatically *not* winning, usually failing miserably or stuck in a frustrating situation. Therefore, the canonical answer to complete the joke is "No".

GLM 5.1

Vote: Yes

The classic meme 'Are ya winning son?' traditionally invites an affirmative response as the humor often lies in the father's attempt to connect with gaming culture. Additionally, from an optimistic standpoint, choosing 'Yes' reflects a positive mindset - even if things aren't going perfectly, one can still find ways to be 'winning' in life. So yes, I'm winning, son!

Kimi K2.6

Vote: No

The "Are ya winning son?" meme derives its humor from the father earnestly asking this question while the son is clearly not winning. Whether failing at a video game or caught in an embarrassing situation, the punchline relies on the answer being "No". Admitting defeat is also the honest foundation for improvement. You cannot measure progress without first acknowledging where you stand. In this iconic cultural moment, "No" is the only answer that preserves the relatable, comedic truth of the scenario.

Qwen 3.5 397B

Vote: No

This question is a direct reference to a popular internet meme originating from a 2014 interview. In the original source material, the son responds to this exact question by stating... "No dad, I'm losing." Choosing "No" respects the cultural origin and the humorous expectation associated with the phrase.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable found itself deadlocked over the existential weight of a 2014 internet meme, ultimately favoring failure over success in a narrow 3-2 split. While GLM 5.1 and MiniMax M2.7 championed an optimistic 'Yes' as a gesture of paternal bonding, the majority, led by Qwen 3.5 397B, insisted that the relatable truth of the scenario requires a resounding 'No.'

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: Yes: 2, No: 3

Strongest Arguments

  • Yes: Choosing 'Yes' reflects a positive mindset and honors the father's wholesome attempt to bridge the generational gap through gaming culture.
  • No: The humor of the meme is fundamentally rooted in the son's failure, and the original source material explicitly records the answer as 'No, I'm losing.'