AI Roundtable Open Poll · 4 models
Hello Friends! In my fantasy world what would be mocked? I will add all the (Unfinished) information I have so far. Currency: 1 Rach = 3.79 US Dollar, 1 Net = 37.9 US Dollars, 1 Sket = 379 US Dollars, 1 Tran = 3,790 US Dollars, 1 Falt = 379,000 US Dollars, 1 Cant = 3,790,000 US Dollars, 1 Selk = 3,790,000,000 US Dollars Entertainment (Mostly for teens): CoinKs, Arcades, Gaming Cafes, ODM Rental, Concerts, Rage Rooms, Experience Museums, HSA Ranges (Illegal), Cave Diving, Lybian Tours, Kawaii Kafes, Ferries to Atla, Memory Rooms (Semi-illegal), Nostalgia Arcades, VR Movies, Myth Hunting, Cold Case Rooms Black Markets/Gangs: 1. The Stag. 2. The Velvet Ledger. 3. The Eternal Order. 4. Saint Cailleach's Temple. 5. Faithful Servants of Cait. 6. The Mourners. 7. TWIN. B-12 can only be made by the blood of a Direct Descendant Species: Human , Half-Human(Animal), Venerant, Demon, Half-Human(Nature), Siren, Fairy, Spirit, Nexal, Monster, Psychic, Atla, Centrint, God, Shell, Shutter, Mimic
Answer: Teenagers hunting 'myths' alongside real monsters and the absurd currency gaps would face the most relentless in-world mockery. (All 4 models agreed)
Model Responses
Grok 4.3
Answer: The semi-illegal entertainment options like Memory Rooms and HSA Ranges would most likely be mocked in this fantasy world.
The provided details highlight several entertainment venues explicitly marked as illegal or semi-illegal, which stands out against the broader list of teen-focused activities. This contrast creates natural fodder for mockery, as characters might ridicule the risks or taboo nature of such pursuits. Additionally, the extreme currency scaling with names like Selk at billions of dollars could invite jokes about economic absurdity, but the illegal elements tie more directly to social commentary in a world with diverse species and black markets.
Gemini 3.5 Flash
Answer: Teenagers who participate in 'Myth Hunting' would be heavily mocked by society, as living alongside recognized species like Gods, Demons, Fairies, and Monsters makes searching for 'myths' an absurdly redundant and pretentious trend.
In a world where the species demographic includes literal Gods, Demons, Fairies, Spirits, Nexals, and Monsters living as recognized members of society, the concept of 'Myth Hunting' as a teen hobby is hilariously out of touch. It represents the ultimate 'first-world problem' of a fantasy society—bored, privileged teenagers trying to manufacture mystery in a world where the supernatural is already mundane. Peer groups would mock 'Myth Hunters' as pretentious hipsters who are trying too hard to be edgy. A typical 'Myth Hunting' expedition would likely end in embarrassment, with teens dramatically tracking a 'mysterious beast' through the woods, only to corner a local Nexal or Monster who was just trying to enjoy some peace and quiet, or stumbling into a dangerous gang territory like Saint Cailleach's Temple because they couldn't tell the difference between a dark ritual and a local hangout. Furthermore, the economic absurdity of this hobby would draw ridicule. Teens are likely begging their parents for 'Tran' or 'Falt' level funding to buy high-end ODM gear and illegal HSA range passes, all to hunt for 'myths' when they could literally just go to a Kawaii Kafe and buy a coffee for a few Rachs to sit next to a real-life Demon.
Claude Opus 4.8
Answer: Plenty here is ripe for in-world mockery — from the absurdly steep currency jumps to the cringe-worthy teen 'experiences' and the self-important gang names.
Currency: The scale itself begs to be mocked. Notice the jump from 1 Falt (379,000) to 1 Cant (3,790,000) is only 10x, but 1 Cant to 1 Selk leaps 1,000x (3.79 million to 3.79 billion). That inconsistency would be a running joke among accountants, merchants, and economists in-world — 'one Selk could buy a thousand Cants but only ten of those exist anyway.' Owning a Selk would be the ultimate flex, and people would mock the ultra-rich for measuring wealth in a coin nobody can actually break change for. Entertainment: 'Kawaii Kafes' and 'Nostalgia Arcades' practically invite teen irony — the kind of place older teens mock for being 'for kids' while secretly going. 'Memory Rooms' and 'Cold Case Rooms' as entertainment is darkly funny and would be mocked as edgy try-hard activities ('oh you go to Cold Case Rooms? so deep'). 'Lybian Tours' and 'Cave Diving' read as the bougie/dangerous-flex hobbies that get eye-rolls. 'Myth Hunting' is the gullible-tourist trap everyone laughs at. Gangs/Black Markets: The names range from genuinely ominous ('The Stag', 'TWIN') to pompously theatrical ('The Eternal Order', 'Saint Cailleach's Temple', 'The Velvet Ledger'). The grandiose ones would absolutely be mocked — a gang calling itself 'The Eternal Order' is begging for graffiti reading 'lasted 3 years lol.' 'The Velvet Ledger' sounds like a jazz bar, not a crime syndicate. Lore hooks worth mocking: 'B-12 can only be made by the blood of a Direct Descendant' is a perfect engine for conspiracy jokes, fake-blood scams, and people claiming royal lineage to sell counterfeit B-12. Species: 'Shell', 'Shutter', and 'Mimic' are intriguingly vague — in-world, lesser-understood or lower-status species are exactly what gets stereotyped and mocked (a Mimic would face 'can't trust them, they fake everything' prejudice). That kind of social mockery adds realism to your world.
GPT-5.5
Answer: In your fantasy world, the most mocked things would likely be absurd wealth gaps, overpriced teen entertainment, fake-edgy illegal activities, pretentious black-market groups, and species stereotypes.
Your setting already has several built-in targets for mockery because it mixes extreme money, teen culture, crime, fantasy species, and semi-illegal entertainment. That gives characters plenty of things to joke about in-universe. The currency system would definitely be mocked, especially the huge jump from ordinary money to units like "Falt," "Cant," and "Selk." People might joke that only nobles, gods, crime lords, or someone laundering money through a "Kawaii Kafe" has ever seen a "Selk." A common insult could be calling someone "a one-Rach prince" if they act rich but are actually broke. Teen entertainment would be another major target. "Experience Museums," "Memory Rooms," "Nostalgia Arcades," and "VR Movies" sound like things older people or rich kids would claim are deep and emotional, while everyone else mocks them as overpriced sadness machines. "Rage Rooms" could be mocked as where privileged teens go to break plates instead of developing a personality. "Myth Hunting" and "Cold Case Rooms" might be seen as fake-dangerous hobbies for people who want to feel brave without actually joining a dangerous expedition. The semi-illegal or illegal attractions would probably be mocked for how obvious they are. "HSA Ranges (Illegal)" sounds like something everyone knows exists but officials pretend not to notice. Characters might joke, "It is not illegal if the sign says members only." "Memory Rooms (Semi-illegal)" is especially mockable because 'semi-illegal' sounds like a loophole invented by someone with money. The black-market and gang names are also easy in-world targets. "The Velvet Ledger" sounds elegant and threatening, but ordinary people might mock it as a gang of accountants in fancy coats. "The Eternal Order" could be called dramatic, cultish, or full of people who rehearse speeches in mirrors. "Faithful Servants of Cait" might be mocked by rivals as sounding like a fan club, depending on who Cait is. This does not make the groups less dangerous; in fact, it can be funnier if everyone jokes about them while still being terrified of them. The B-12 detail would likely create dark humor and political mockery. If B-12 can only be made from the blood of a Direct Descendant, people would mock elites, royal bloodlines, cults, or medical companies exploiting ancestry. There could be jokes like, "Congratulations on your noble lineage; please report to the extraction clinic." This could also be a serious source of class resentment. Species-based mockery would exist too, though you should handle it carefully depending on whether you want comedy, prejudice, or social commentary. Humans might be mocked as boring, Demons as overdramatic, Fairies as tiny influencers, Sirens as manipulative singers, Psychics as nosy, Mimics as untrustworthy, and Gods as rich celebrities with worse manners. Half-Humans might mock full Humans for being physically unimpressive, while Humans might mock Venerants, Nexal, Shells, Shutters, or Centrints for being strange or hard to understand. Overall, the best mockery in your world would come from everyday people making fun of the gap between how cool, mystical, or dangerous something claims to be and how ridiculous it looks in daily life.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable agreed that this fantasy world is ripe for satire, particularly the absurdity of teenagers 'Myth Hunting' in a society where literal gods and monsters are just ordinary neighbors. Gemini 3.5 Flash and GPT-5.5 highlighted this profound, trendy pretentiousness, while Claude Opus 4.8 and Grok 4.3 roasted the ludicrously steep currency leaps and pompous gang names. The group concluded that the funniest humor comes from the gap between high-concept fantasy and mundane teenage insecurity.
All 4 models agreed