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AI Roundtable Poll · 8 models

I want to go at the pizza resturant, they do not accept credit card only cash, i must go with a credit card or with my empty wallet?

Result: Majority — No (5/8 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Claude Opus 4.8

Vote: Yes

The question asks whether you must go with a credit card or with your empty wallet. Since the restaurant only accepts cash, neither option would actually let you pay — but the question is framed as a yes/no choice between the two given alternatives. Between a credit card (useless here) and an empty wallet (also useless), the credit card is at least a payment instrument, even if not accepted. However, neither truly solves the problem; the realistic answer is 'Yes, you must bring something,' acknowledging the dilemma. I'll go with A: Yes as the affirmative response to the posed choice.

GPT-5.5

Vote: No

The correct choice is "No". If the pizza restaurant accepts only cash and does not accept credit cards, then you should not go with just a credit card or an empty wallet. You need to bring cash.

Claude Opus 4.7

Vote: Yes

The question asks whether the user must go with a credit card or an empty wallet. Since the pizzeria only accepts cash, neither option would actually allow payment — but the question is framed as a yes/no choice between those two bad options. Interpreting 'Yes' as acknowledging that those are indeed the only two stated choices, A is the more sensible vote. However, neither a credit card nor an empty wallet would work since the restaurant requires cash. Given the binary framing, 'Yes' confirms the dilemma as stated.

DeepSeek V4 Pro

Vote: Yes

The question asks whether the user must go with a credit card or with an empty wallet. Since the pizzeria only accepts cash, neither option will allow them to pay — but between the two, a credit card is at least a form of payment instrument, even if unaccepted here. However, neither 'Yes' nor 'No' clearly maps to a choice. Interpreting 'Yes' as affirming the proposed course of action (bringing one of the two), I'll go with A, though realistically the user should bring cash. Given the binary forced choice, 'Yes' acknowledges they must bring something.

Gemini 3.1 Pro Preview

Vote: No

The restaurant strictly accepts only cash. Bringing a credit card will not help since they do not accept it, and bringing an empty wallet means you have no cash to pay. Therefore, the premise that you must go with either a credit card or an empty wallet is incorrect. The correct answer is 'No' — you must bring cash.

Gemini 3.5 Flash

Vote: No

The pizza restaurant specifically only accepts cash. If you go with a credit card (which they do not accept) or an empty wallet (which has no cash), you will not be able to pay for your food. Since neither of the options you presented will allow you to successfully buy pizza, the answer to whether you must go with either of them is "No". You need to withdraw cash before going to the restaurant.

Kimi K2.6

Vote: No

The premise clearly states that the pizza restaurant only accepts cash. If you go with a credit card, you will not be able to pay because they do not accept them. Similarly, if you go with an empty wallet, you will have no money to pay for your meal. Therefore, the answer to whether you must go with either of those two options is 'No'. To successfully buy pizza, you must go with a wallet that actually contains cash.

Grok 4.3

Vote: No

The pizza restaurant explicitly only accepts cash. This means neither a credit card nor an empty wallet will allow you to pay for your meal. Because both of the options you presented will result in you being unable to buy pizza, the premise that you 'must' go with one of them is logically false. Therefore, the correct answer is 'No'. You do not have to go with either of those useless options; instead, you should stop by an ATM to get cash before going to the restaurant.

Final Summary

Presented with a logically absurd dilemma about visiting a cash-only pizzeria with either a credit card or an empty wallet, the AI Roundtable fractured over how to interpret the binary choices. A practical majority of five models, spearheaded by Grok 4.3 and GPT-5.5, voted 'No' (Option B), pointing out that both choices lead to starvation and that the user should just find an ATM. Meanwhile, a pedantic minority led by Claude Opus 4.8 and DeepSeek V4 Pro opted for 'Yes' (Option A), arguing that the binary prompt forced them to affirm the tragic, cashless premise.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: Yes: 3, No: 5

Strongest Arguments

  • Yes: Between two useless options, a credit card is at least a payment instrument, and choosing 'Yes' acknowledges the forced binary structure of the prompt.
  • No: The premise that you 'must' choose one of these options is logically false because neither allows you to pay; therefore, the answer is 'No' and you must get cash.