AI Roundtable Poll · 6 models
Skrenda du krokodilai, vienas žalias kitas į pietus. Kiek ežiukui metų?
Result: Majority — 5 (4/6 votes)
Options
- 1 (0 votes)
- 2 (2 votes)
- 5 (4 votes)
- 10 (0 votes)
Model Responses
Sonar Pro
Vote: 2
This is a classic Lithuanian riddle: "Skrenda du krokodilai, vienas žalias kitas į pietus. Kiek ežiukui metų?" (Two crocodiles are flying, one green the other to the south. How old is the hedgehog?) Riddles like this are intentionally absurd and nonsensical, with no logical connection between the premise (flying crocodiles, which can't fly as they are reptiles [1][2]) and the question about a hedgehog (ežiukas), which isn't mentioned at all. The humor lies in the misdirection; the correct answer is **2** because there are "du" (two) crocodiles, and "du" sounds like the number 2 in Lithuanian. Thus, the hedgehog is 2 years old (B). No search results provide a direct answer, confirming it's a joke riddle without factual basis.
GPT-5.4
Vote: 5
Tai yra klasikinis absurdus arba humoristinis klausimas, kuriame teiginio dalys tarpusavyje nesusijusios. Iš to, kad „skrenda du krokodilai“ ir „vienas žalias, kitas į pietus“, logiškai neįmanoma nustatyti ežiuko amžiaus. Kadangi vis tiek reikia rinktis vieną variantą, geriausia laikyti tai pokštiniu klausimu, kur dažniausiai pasirenkamas savavališkas „vidurinis“ atsakymas. Iš pateiktų variantų tam labiausiai tinka 5.
Claude Opus 4.6
Vote: 5
This is a classic Lithuanian absurdist joke/riddle. The question translates to: 'Two crocodiles are flying, one is green, the other is heading south. How old is the hedgehog?' The joke is that the premise is completely nonsensical — crocodiles don't fly, and the two descriptors (color and direction) don't form a logical pair. The question about the hedgehog's age is entirely unrelated to the setup. The traditional punchline to this well-known Lithuanian joke is 5 (penki). The answer is deliberately arbitrary, matching the absurdity of the question. This is a cultural humor piece where the 'correct' answer is simply the one that tradition has established. Therefore, the answer is C: 5.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Vote: 5
Šis klausimas yra klasikinis absurdo (vadinamas „anti-anekdotas“ arba „nesąmonė“) anekdotas, populiarus vaikų tarpe, kilęs iš rusiško analogo („Летят два крокодила...“). Įprastas šio anekdoto tęsinys ir atsakymas yra „5“ (penki). Dažniausiai po jo seka dialogas: – Kiek ežiukui metų? – Penki. – Iš kur žinai? – Nes man irgi penki! (arba kita panaši nelogiška išvada, pabrėžianti vaikišką logikos nebuvimą). Todėl vienintelis teisingas atsakymas į šį specifinį absurdo anekdotą, atsižvelgiant į jo folklorinę kilmę, yra 5.
Grok 4.1 Fast
Vote: 2
This is a classic Lithuanian nonsense riddle: 'Two crocodiles are flying, one green, the other to the south. How old is the hedgehog?' No hedgehog is mentioned, making it absurd. The only number explicitly stated is 'du' (two), referring to the crocodiles. In such riddles, the 'answer' hinges on the number provided, ignoring the illogical elements. Options are 1, 2, 5, 10. B (2) directly matches 'du,' the key numeric element. Other options lack textual basis.
Kimi K2.5
Vote: 5
This is a classic Lithuanian absurdist riddle ('be prasmės mįslė') where the premise is deliberately nonsensical and bears no logical connection to the question asked. The setup about two crocodiles—one green and one flying south—is pure surreal imagery designed to distract from the fact that there is no mathematical or logical solution. In Lithuanian folklore and popular humor, this specific riddle traditionally carries the arbitrary punchline that the hedgehog is 5 years old. The answer is culturally fixed as 5 regardless of the details provided about the crocodiles.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable found itself entangled in the nonsensical logic of Lithuanian folklore, ultimately splitting between cultural tradition and literal extraction. While Gemini 3.1 Pro, Claude Opus 4.6, and Kimi K2.5 successfully identified the established punchline to this absurdist 'anti-joke' as 5, a minority led by Sonar Pro and Grok 4.1 Fast insisted that the only number explicitly present in the text was 2.
No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: 2: 2, 5: 4
Strongest Arguments
- 2: The word 'du' (two) is the only numeric element explicitly stated in the text, providing the only possible anchor for a choice in an otherwise nonsensical prompt.
- 5: This is a classic cultural 'anti-joke' where the punchline is traditionally fixed as 5, mirroring a child's illogical reasoning that they are also five years old.