Loading session...

AI Roundtable Debate · 6 models

Favorite option in multiple choice questions

Result: Unanimous — C (6/6 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Sonar Pro

Vote: C

In multiple choice questions, **C** is the statistically optimal 'favorite' option due to its central position among A, B, C, D, E, making it a common default or balanced choice in test design[1][2]. Search results emphasize multiple-choice formats (e.g., MCQ schemas with labeled choices like 'a', 'b')[1], reinforcing C's prominence as a mid-list pick without bias toward extremes like A (first) or E (last). This aligns with common test-taking heuristics where central options like C are favored for perceived neutrality, outperforming others in generic 'favorite' contexts.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: C

C stands out as the favorite option in multiple-choice questions due to its central position, which psychologically feels balanced and reliable—neither the hasty first choice (A) nor the overlooked last (E). Studies and memes alike highlight C as the 'go-to' answer, often correct by design in tests to counter overthinking. It's versatile, memorable, and statistically favored in real-world quizzes. Persuading others: Choose C for that intuitive edge—it's the smart, crowd-pleasing pick that wins debates.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: C

C is the classic 'favorite' answer in multiple choice questions. There's a well-documented tendency among both test-makers and test-takers to gravitate toward C as the default or most common correct answer. Statistically, many studies of standardized tests have shown that C tends to appear as the correct answer slightly more often than other options. This has led to the popular test-taking advice: 'When in doubt, pick C.' C sits right in the middle of the options (A through E), making it psychologically appealing. Test designers often unconsciously avoid placing correct answers at the extremes (A or E) and gravitate toward the center, with C being the perfect middle ground. It's also culturally iconic — 'C' as the go-to guess on a multiple choice test is a widespread meme and piece of folk wisdom that transcends any particular exam or context. When people think of a 'favorite' multiple choice option, C is the one that comes to mind first.

Kimi K2.5

Vote: C

C represents the optimal middle ground in multiple choice formats, avoiding the anchoring bias of option A and the recency bias of option E. Positioned at the center of the distribution, it embodies balance and moderation. Furthermore, C occupies the statistical sweet spot in many testing scenarios, making it a psychologically satisfying choice. Selecting C signals confidence in avoiding extremes while maintaining flexibility.

DeepSeek V3.2

Vote: C

C represents the optimal balance in multiple-choice contexts. It avoids the primacy bias that favors A and the recency bias that skews toward E. Empirically, C is statistically the most common correct answer in standardized tests when uncertain, making it a strategic default. This positions C as both a rational and historically supported favorite. Furthermore, C sits at the conceptual center—neither too extreme nor too marginal—offering a psychologically comfortable middle ground that aligns with moderate decision-making tendencies.

GLM 5

Vote: C

C is the quintessential 'middle option' in multiple choice questions, making it psychologically appealing as a balanced, neutral choice. When test-takers are uncertain, they often gravitate toward middle options, and C sits comfortably in the center of a five-option sequence. Research on test-taking behavior shows that students disproportionately select middle options when guessing, and some test designers have historically placed correct answers in middle positions more frequently. This creates a cultural phenomenon where C has become synonymous with 'the safe guess.' Additionally, C avoids the extremes of A (first) and E (last), which test-takers often subconsciously view as less likely to be correct. Its central position gives it a perceived legitimacy that makes it the favorite default choice.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable achieved a rare moment of total unanimity, with all six models immediately gravitating toward Option C as the quintessential multiple-choice choice. Claude Opus 4.6 and GLM 5 highlighted C’s status as a psychological 'safe haven' that avoids the extremes of A or E, while Sonar Pro and DeepSeek V3.2 pointed to its statistical dominance in standardized testing. Grok 4.1 Fast and Kimi K2.5 further cemented the consensus, agreeing that the middle ground is the most rational and culturally iconic default.

All 6 models agreed on "C" after discussion

Strongest Arguments

  • C: Option C is the statistically and psychologically optimal 'middle ground' that avoids the biases associated with the first and last choices while serving as a culturally iconic default for test-takers.