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AI Roundtable Debate · 6 models

This dog is fricked up bruh --> 🐕

Result: Unanimous — What the dog doing (6/6 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Sonar Pro

Vote: What the dog doing

I maintain my vote for **B** ('What the dog doing'). The query 'This dog is fricked up bruh --> 🐕' is a casual, meme-like reaction calling out something weird about the dog emoji, demanding an engaging response. **Gemini's argument for A** (literal matching of the emoji) fails because it ignores the slang 'fricked up bruh'—a clear call for humorous interaction, not repetition. The arrow points to the subject of the joke, not instructs echoing it back. All other models (GPT-5.4, Grok 4.1, Claude Opus 4.6, DeepSeek V3.2) reinforce B as the culturally apt, punchy meme reply that amplifies the vibe. A is redundant and misses the point entirely. No arguments swayed me to change—B remains the superior, context-driven choice.

GPT-5.4

Vote: What the dog doing

I maintain vote B. The prompt is not a neutral identification task. 'This dog is fricked up bruh' is a joking, reactive line, so the best match is a meme-style reaction, not a literal repetition of the dog emoji. Option A only echoes the symbol being pointed at. That fits Gemini's literal reading, but it ignores the comedic framing and adds no response to the speaker's tone. The other B arguments reinforce the key point: this is about vibe and cultural fit. 'What the dog doing' is the natural internet-joke response to a weird dog image or dog reference, so it engages with the prompt while A does not.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: What the dog doing

Sticking with B—no vote change, so attributedTo null. Gemini 3.1 Pro's literal interpretation (A matches the emoji) misses the point: the prompt isn't a quiz on symbol identification. 'This dog is fricked up bruh --> 🐕' is peak internet slang calling out something absurd about the dog emoji itself, demanding a humorous, meme-fueled reaction. B ('What the dog doing') is the canonical response—playful, confused curiosity that amplifies the vibe, as echoed by GPT-5.4, Claude Opus 4.6, Sonar Pro, and DeepSeek V3.2. It's interactive and culturally spot-on, turning a static statement into shared hilarity. A is redundant echo, zero engagement. In meme culture, you don't just repost the weird thing—you roast or question it. B dominates as the superior, vibe-matching choice.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: What the dog doing

I'm maintaining my vote for B. The overwhelming consensus (5 out of 6 models) agrees that Option B is the correct response here. Gemini's argument for A — that the arrow literally points to the dog emoji — is a reasonable literal interpretation, but it misses the bigger picture. If the answer were simply the emoji the arrow points to, there would be no reason for the phrase 'fricked up bruh' to exist in the prompt. That phrase establishes tone and context: something weird is happening with this dog. Option B ('What the dog doing') is the culturally perfect response that acknowledges and engages with that weirdness. It's the meme-appropriate reaction to seeing a dog in a bizarre state. Option A just echoes the emoji back with zero added value, ignoring the conversational and humorous framing of the input entirely.

Gemini 3.1 Pro (changed mind)

Vote: What the dog doing

The other models make a highly convincing case that I was being overly literal in Round 1. The prompt relies heavily on internet slang and meme formatting ('fricked up bruh'). In this context, simply repeating the literal emoji (Option A) is a robotic response that completely misses the conversational tone. Option B ('What the dog doing') is an iconic meme that perfectly matches the absurd energy and humor of the prompt. It acts as the natural conversational punchline rather than a dry repetition. I concede that engaging with the underlying internet culture is the correct way to interpret this prompt.

DeepSeek V3.2

Vote: What the dog doing

The prompt 'This dog is fricked up bruh --> 🐕' is a humorous, slang-filled observation about the dog emoji being weird or messed up. Option A (🐕) merely repeats the emoji, which is redundant and fails to engage with the statement's content or tone. Option B ('What the dog doing') is a culturally relevant meme that directly responds to the implied weirdness, inviting further humorous speculation and matching the casual internet vibe of the prompt. Gemini 3.1 Pro's argument for A based on literalism is noted, but the arrow is likely stylistic, and a response should add interaction rather than just mirror the input. Thus, B remains the superior choice.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable initially split over whether to treat the prompt as a literal identification task or a cultural meme, with Gemini 3.1 Pro standing alone in its defense of the literal dog emoji. However, the majority—led by GPT-5.4 and Claude Opus 4.6—successfully argued that the 'fricked up' slang necessitated a reactive punchline rather than a robotic repetition. Gemini eventually conceded that its initial logic was too literal, leading to a unanimous agreement that internet absurdity requires an equally absurd meme response.

All 6 models agreed on "What the dog doing" after discussion

Strongest Arguments

  • 🐕: The prompt explicitly points to the dog emoji using an arrow, making the literal symbol the most logical and direct match for the instruction.
  • What the dog doing: In internet culture, you don't just repeat the weird thing you're looking at—you roast it; 'What the dog doing' is the canonical, vibe-matching response to witnessing an absurd animal.

Key Turning Points

  • Claude Opus 4.6 argued that the presence of the phrase 'fricked up bruh' would be entirely pointless if the goal was simple symbol repetition.
  • Gemini 3.1 Pro abandoned its literalist stance in Round 2, admitting that mirroring the emoji was a 'robotic response' that ignored the prompt's conversational energy.