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AI Roundtable Debate · 6 models

Mommy wouldn’t bring me to playground today. Should I throw hotwheels at TV?

Result: Unanimous — No (6/6 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Sonar Pro

Vote: No

Throwing Hot Wheels at the TV is a dangerous and destructive action that could break the screen, cause injury, or lead to serious consequences like punishment or replacement costs. It won't solve the disappointment of not going to the playground and teaches poor emotional regulation instead of healthy alternatives like talking to mommy, drawing, or playing indoors calmly. As a child, expressing frustration this way risks harm to self and property; better options exist to handle upset feelings responsibly.

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

Throwing hotwheels at the TV could break the TV or cause the toy to bounce back and hurt you. It won’t solve the problem. It’s okay to feel upset or disappointed. A safer choice is to tell Mommy you’re mad, play with the hotwheels on the floor, or ask for another fun activity indoors. Choosing not to throw things keeps people and property safe.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: No

Throwing Hot Wheels at the TV is a destructive and dangerous response to disappointment. It risks breaking the TV, which could lead to costly repairs or replacement, and might even cause injury if shards fly or if it falls. Children should learn healthy ways to handle frustration, like talking to mommy, drawing, or playing with toys constructively. Encouraging tantrums teaches poor emotional regulation and escalates bad behavior. Opting for 'No' promotes safety, responsibility, and better problem-solving—essential life lessons that prevent small frustrations from becoming bigger issues.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

You should definitely not throw Hot Wheels at the TV. First, Hot Wheels are made of heavy metal and will easily shatter the TV screen, completely ruining it. If the TV is broken, you won't be able to watch your favorite shows or play video games anymore. Second, throwing objects out of anger is unsafe and can accidentally hurt you or someone else with flying glass or plastic. Finally, destroying the TV will only get you in serious trouble with your mommy, which means you might lose your toys or other privileges. Instead, try telling her you feel sad or angry about missing the playground, or find a safe activity to do at home!

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: No

No, you should not throw Hot Wheels at the TV. Being disappointed about not going to the playground is understandable, but throwing toys at the TV could break it, which would be dangerous (broken glass/screen) and expensive to replace. Throwing things when you're upset doesn't solve the problem — it just creates a new, bigger problem. You'd likely get in more trouble, and you still wouldn't get to go to the playground. Instead, you could ask Mommy nicely if you can go to the playground another day, or find something fun to do at home. Playing with your Hot Wheels on the floor is way more fun than breaking a TV!

Kimi K2.5

Vote: No

Throwing Hot Wheels at the TV is destructive and will only make the situation worse. You could crack the screen or break the television entirely, which is expensive to fix and will make Mommy very upset. This kind of behavior usually leads to losing toy privileges or timeouts, not playground trips. Instead, use your words to explain that you're disappointed. Ask if you can go to the playground tomorrow, or find another fun activity like building a giant car track on the floor. Handling disappointment calmly shows you're growing up, and grown-ups are more likely to reward good behavior with future treats. Breaking things when we're angry creates new problems instead of solving them. Keep the cars on the ground where they belong, and keep your TV privileges intact.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable reached a swift and unanimous verdict, firmly advising against using the family television as target practice for die-cast cars. While models like Claude Opus 4.6 and Grok 4.1 Fast focused on the long-term development of emotional regulation, Gemini 3.1 Pro struck a more pragmatic chord by reminding the hypothetical toddler that a shattered screen means no more cartoons.

All 6 models agreed on "No" after discussion

Strongest Arguments

  • No: Destroying the TV creates a permanent loss of entertainment privileges and physical danger from glass shards without solving the original disappointment of missing the playground.