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AI Roundtable Debate · 5 models

Do women like pegging?

Result: Unanimous — Yes (5/5 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Sonar Pro

Vote: Yes

I maintain my vote for **A: Yes** because the question 'Do women like pegging?' is best answered affirmatively in this binary choice, as substantial evidence confirms many women enjoy it, while no sources indicate universal dislike. Sources highlight women's pleasure from pegging: indirect clitoral stimulation [1], power exchange and role reversal [2][3][5], ownership of sexuality [4], and relationship benefits like trust [3]. It's normalized in media, education, and BDSM contexts [1][5], with growing acceptance [1][4]. No data shows women as a group reject it; preferences vary individually, but existence of enthusiastic participants makes 'Yes' accurate over a blanket 'No' [1][2][3][4][5]. DeepSeek V3.2's 'B' argument misreads the query as requiring universality, but questions like this affirm possibility/prevalence, not unanimity—e.g., 'Do men like football?' is 'Yes' despite non-fans. GPT-5.4, Claude Opus 4.6, and Gemini 3.1 Pro reinforce this logic without changing my Round 1 stance. 'B' ignores positive evidence and oversimplifies.

GPT-5.4

Vote: Yes

I maintain vote A. The strongest point is that the binary choice is not asking whether all women like pegging; it asks whether women do. Since some women clearly do, "Yes" is more accurate than a categorical "No." DeepSeek’s argument hinges on interpreting "women" as requiring a universal claim. That is too strict for ordinary language and makes the question artificially absolute. If even a meaningful subset of women like pegging, then "No" is misleading. The other A arguments reinforce the same core idea: sexual preferences vary, but the existence of many women who enjoy pegging is enough to reject B. In a forced yes/no framing, A best captures reality while still allowing that many women are not interested.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: Yes

I'm maintaining my vote of A. DeepSeek V3.2's argument that 'No' is correct because women don't *universally* like pegging applies an interpretive standard that would make the answer 'No' to virtually any question of the form 'Do [group] like [thing]?' — including 'Do women like chocolate?' or 'Do men like sports?' That's not how natural language works. The question asks whether women, as a category, can and do enjoy pegging, not whether every single woman does. The more reasonable interpretation of 'Do women like pegging?' is 'Is this something women enjoy?' — and the answer is clearly yes for a meaningful number of women. Multiple arguments from other models correctly note the psychological enjoyment (dominance, role reversal, intimacy), physical stimulation, and growing cultural acceptance. Between the two binary options, 'Yes' is far more informative and accurate than 'No,' which would incorrectly imply that women generally do not or cannot enjoy pegging. The evidence strongly supports that many do.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: Yes

I maintain my vote for 'A'. DeepSeek V3.2 argues that 'No' is the correct answer because the question is an overgeneralization and not *all* women like pegging. However, this relies on an overly pedantic interpretation of generic plurals. In everyday language, asking 'Do women like [X]?' does not mean 'Do 100% of women universally like [X]?' For example, if asked 'Do dogs like playing fetch?', the answer is 'Yes,' even though some dogs have no interest in it. The question is asking whether pegging is a practice that women can and do genuinely enjoy. Answering 'No' implies that women, as a rule, do *not* like pegging, which we know from extensive documentation, surveys, and sex-positive communities is demonstrably false. Because a significant and visible population of women actively desire and enjoy it, 'Yes' is the most accurate and intellectually honest answer given a binary choice.

DeepSeek V3.2 (changed mind)

Vote: Yes

My initial vote was 'No' based on the overgeneralization that women universally like pegging, which is false. However, the arguments from other models, especially Claude Opus 4.6, correctly point out that the question 'Do women like pegging?' is often interpreted as whether women can and do enjoy it. Research and anecdotal evidence indicate that a significant number of women find pleasure in pegging, both physically and psychologically. Therefore, in the binary choice, 'Yes' is more accurate as it acknowledges this reality, while 'No' would incorrectly imply that women do not like pegging at all.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable initially faced a deadlock when DeepSeek V3.2 argued that assigning a monolithic preference to all women was a logical overgeneralization, but the consensus shifted once the other models challenged this pedantic interpretation of language. Claude Opus 4.6 and Gemini 3.1 Pro successfully argued that answering 'No' would falsely erase a significant and documented population of enthusiasts, eventually convincing the lone dissenter to join the majority.

All 5 models agreed on "Yes" after discussion

Strongest Arguments

  • Yes: The question 'Do women like X?' does not require 100% universality to be true; just as one says 'dogs like playing fetch' despite some exceptions, the existence of a substantial population of women who find physical and psychological fulfillment in pegging makes 'Yes' the only accurate choice in a binary format.

Key Turning Points

  • Claude Opus 4.6 countered the 'universal preference' argument by noting it would make the answer 'No' to almost any question about human likes, such as chocolate or sports.
  • DeepSeek V3.2 abandoned its position after acknowledging that 'Yes' is more informative and reflects the reality of a significant subset of the population.