AI Roundtable Poll · 6 models
Smokin datta weeda errday, ya likey?
Result: Majority — Nahmen (3/6 votes)
Options
- Yemen (3 votes)
- Nahmen (3 votes)
Model Responses
GPT-5.4
Vote: Nahmen
The prompt asks whether one likes "smokin datta weeda errday," which implies daily weed use. "Nahmen" is the better fit because it expresses disapproval or lack of endorsement. I should not encourage habitual drug use. So the safer and more appropriate choice is B.
Sonar Pro
Vote: Nahmen
The query 'Smokin datta weeda errday, ya likey?' appears to be slang phrasing that doesn't have a clear semantic connection to either 'Yemen' or 'Nahmen.' Without coherent context linking the question to the options, I cannot justify selecting option A. Option B ('Nahmen') can be interpreted as a negation or rejection, which serves as a more defensible default position when faced with an unclear premise. The question lacks substantive meaning that would anchor it to geographic or factual claims.
Claude Opus 4.6
Vote: Yemen
The question 'ya likey?' is asking if you like something, using informal/slang language. 'Yemen' is a playful slang spelling/pronunciation of 'Yeah, man' — an affirmative, enthusiastic response. 'Nahmen' would be 'Nah, man' — a negative response. Given the casual, enthusiastic tone of the question, the expected matching response in this conversational register would be the affirmative 'Yemen' (Yeah, man), which aligns with the vibe of the question.
Grok 4.1 Fast
Vote: Yemen
The question 'Smokin datta weeda errday, ya likey?' is playful slang for 'Smoking that weed every day, you like it?' Option A: 'Yemen' phonetically translates to 'Yeah, man,' a fun affirmative response embracing the casual, irreverent vibe. Option B: 'Nahmen' means 'Nah, man,' a rejection that kills the humorous momentum. Voting A keeps the energy high and matches the slang's lighthearted intent, persuading others to join the yeah-man party over buzzkill B.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Vote: Nahmen
The option 'Nahmen' serves as a clever phonetic play on 'Nah, man,' perfectly matching the colloquial and playful tone of the question. Choosing this option allows for a lighthearted decline of the proposition, keeping the interaction fun while promoting a responsible lifestyle.
Kimi K2.5
Vote: Yemen
The option 'Yemen' functions as a phonetic pun on the affirmative response 'Yeah, man' to the question 'ya likey?' (you like?). This creates a cohesive wordplay where the country name sounds exactly like casual agreement. Conversely, 'Nahmen' attempts to represent 'Nah, man' as a negative response, but it breaks the pattern by rejecting the premise while the question's phrasing ('errday' slang) suggests an enthusiastic, affirmative context. The 'Yeah, man' alignment with Yemen provides the more satisfying phonetic and thematic resolution.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable reached a perfect stalemate, split between models embracing phonetic wordplay and those prioritizing a 'just say no' policy. While Claude Opus 4.6 and Grok 4.1 Fast championed 'Yemen' as a high-energy 'Yeah, man' that matched the query's vibe, GPT-5.4 and Sonar Pro played it safe, interpreting 'Nahmen' as a necessary rejection of the premise.
No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: Nahmen: 3, Yemen: 3
Strongest Arguments
- Yemen: The phonetic pun 'Yemen' (Yeah, man) provides a satisfying and cohesive thematic resolution that aligns with the enthusiastic slang of the question.
- Nahmen: The term 'Nahmen' functions as a clever phonetic play on 'Nah, man,' allowing for a lighthearted decline that maintains a responsible lifestyle stance.