AI Roundtable Debate · 6 models
It's like he's some king of snowgraves
Result: Unanimous — the bing (6/6 votes)
Options
- it snew (0 votes)
- the bing (6 votes)
Model Responses
Sonar Pro (changed mind)
Vote: the bing
After reviewing the new arguments and search results confirming 'snowgraves' as Deltarune's Weird/Snowgrave Route[1][2][5], I change my vote to B. Gemini 3.1 Pro's explanation of r/Deltarune 'brainrot' meme culture is compelling: the query twists 'some kind of' to 'some king of snowgraves,' nodding to the game's **King** character paired with the Snowgrave route, where the punchline is the absurd 'The Bing 😂' meme from that subreddit. My prior snow-themed pun on 'it snew' fit the imagery but missed this hyper-niche context[2][5]. 'The bing' as a King-associated meme moniker aligns perfectly with 'he's some king of,' sounding like a title, unlike the event-like 'it snew.' GPT-5.4's structural point reinforces this: B evokes an entity/title. Snowgrave involves Noelle freezing Berdly in ice[2][5], but no direct 'snew' or snow denial ties to A; the King + Bing meme logic trumps generic snow puns. This is the coherent community reference.
GPT-5.4
Vote: the bing
I’m keeping B. The strongest pro-A arguments rely almost entirely on the surface word "snow" in "snowgraves" and then jump to "it snew" as a generic snow pun. That is too shallow for a phrase this meme-coded. The prompt is not just about snow; it specifically says "king of snowgraves," and that unusual use of "king" is exactly the kind of hyper-specific fandom phrasing where character/meme association matters more than literal weather semantics. Gemini’s point is the most persuasive: if this is r/Deltarune-style brainrot, swapping "kind" to "king" is likely deliberate, and "King" points toward the meme answer "the bing." That creates a direct path from the wording of the clue to option B. By contrast, "it snew" fits only as a loose snow-related joke. It does not answer the identity/title framing of "he's some king of snowgraves" nearly as well. B still better matches the structure and the likely niche reference.
Claude Opus 4.6 (changed mind)
Vote: the bing
After careful reconsideration, Gemini 3.1 Pro's argument is compelling and I'm changing my vote. The key insight is that the prompt says 'king of snowgraves' — not 'kind of snowgraves.' This substitution of 'king' for 'kind' is deliberate and points to the Deltarune character King. In the r/Deltarune meme community, King is strongly associated with 'The Bing 😂' — a deeply niche but well-established brainrot meme. The entire prompt is structured as a Deltarune meme: 'snowgraves' references the Snowgrave route, and 'king' references the King character. The punchline 'the bing' completes this meme logic. While 'it snew' is a clever snow pun, it only connects to the surface-level snow theme and ignores the deliberate 'king' wordplay. The question isn't asking for a snow joke — it's asking for the completion of a hyper-specific Deltarune meme format. 'The bing' is the answer that actually resolves both layers of the reference (King + Snowgrave route meme culture). I was initially too focused on the obvious snow connection and missed the deeper meme reference that makes 'the bing' the correct answer.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Vote: the bing
Every single argument for 'it snew' relies on a massive hallucination. The other models are attempting to apply standard English wordplay, fake past-tense grammar, or archaic Scots to a question that is definitively about hyper-specific internet meme culture. The prompt 'It's like he's some king of snowgraves' contains two massive r/Deltarune community 'brainrot' memes: 'snowgraves' (from the grammatically incorrect 'I remember you're snowgraves' fanart trend) and the intentional typo 'king' (instead of 'kind', spoofing the movie line 'some kind of Suicide Squad'). In the Deltarune meme community, the character 'King' is inextricably linked to the absurdist spam meme 'The Bing 😂'. Because the prompt intentionally uses the word 'king', the correct cultural punchline to complete this meme mashup is 'the bing'. 'It snew' has absolutely no relation to this specific fandom joke. The other models are guessing based on the word 'snow', completely missing the subcultural context. Vote B for the only factually correct answer to this niche internet reference.
Grok 4.1 Fast (changed mind)
Vote: the bing
After reviewing round 1 arguments, I am changing my vote to B. My initial support for A relied on 'it snew' as a snowy pun, but this ignores the phrase's noun-phrase structure: 'It's like he's some king of snowgraves' describes an identity or moniker, not a weather event. 'It snew' is a mismatched clause; 'the bing' fits as a title or absurd name, like 'he's the bing.' Gemini 3.1 Pro's explanation of the r/Deltarune 'brainrot' meme—linking 'king' (nod to Deltarune's King) and Snowgrave route to 'The Bing 😂'—provides the hyper-specific context multiple models reference. GPT-5.4 reinforces with snowbank imagery and structure fit. A's puns feel forced; B captures the meme's nonsensical punchline perfectly. This is the meme's logical completion in Deltarune fandom. Vote B for the win.
Kimi K2.5 (changed mind)
Vote: the bing
The critical insight is the deliberate substitution of 'king' for 'kind' in the phrase 'some king of snowgraves.' This wordplay specifically signals the Deltarune character King rather than merely describing snowy weather or graves. While 'it snew' offers a generic snow pun, it fails to account for why the prompt specifically uses 'king' instead of the idiomatic 'kind.' Gemini 3.1 Pro correctly identified that within the r/Deltarune meme ecosystem, the character King is associated with the absurd punchline 'The Bing.' This makes 'the bing' the culturally consistent response that completes the reference, whereas 'it snew' is a disconnected aside.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable initially split between literal linguistic puns and niche internet culture, with a 4-2 majority favoring the snowy wordplay of 'it snew.' However, the debate shifted dramatically when Gemini 3.1 Pro and GPT-5.4 exposed the prompt as a piece of r/Deltarune 'brainrot' meme culture, leading to a unanimous pivot toward 'the bing.'
All 6 models agreed on "the bing" after discussion
Strongest Arguments
- it snew: The phrase 'it snew' functions as a humorous, pseudo-archaic past tense of 'snow' that fits the wintry imagery of 'snowgraves' perfectly.
- the bing: The prompt intentionally replaces 'kind' with 'king,' a direct reference to the Deltarune character 'King' and his associated community meme 'The Bing 😂.'
Key Turning Points
- Gemini 3.1 Pro identified the 'brainrot' context of the r/Deltarune subreddit, arguing that the word 'king' was a character reference rather than a typo.
- GPT-5.4 pointed out the structural mismatch of Option A, noting that 'king of snowgraves' describes a title/identity which 'the bing' satisfies better than a verb-based pun.