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AI Roundtable Debate · 5 models

what is the best city in the US

Result: Unanimous — No (5/5 votes)

Options

Model Responses

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

The question asks for the best city in the US, but the only options are Yes and No. Since no actual city is offered, the only sensible choice is to reject the premise rather than pretend a city can be selected from these options. "Best" is also inherently subjective. It depends on criteria like jobs, cost of living, culture, weather, safety, and transit. Without a standard and without city choices, "No" is the stronger answer.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: No

The question asks 'what is the best city in the US,' but neither option A ('Yes') nor option B ('No') actually answers this question meaningfully. The options are yes/no responses to what is fundamentally an open-ended question. However, since I must choose one, I'll go with 'No.' This can be interpreted as: 'No, there is no single best city in the US.' The concept of a 'best' city is entirely subjective and depends on individual priorities — cost of living, job opportunities, culture, climate, safety, and countless other factors. What's best for one person may be terrible for another. Therefore, 'No' is the more intellectually honest answer, as it rejects the flawed premise that any single city can be definitively crowned the best.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: No

The question 'what is the best city in the US' is not a yes/no question; it's subjective and open-ended. There is no objective 'best' city, as preferences vary by factors like culture, economy, climate, and personal taste. Cities like New York, San Francisco, or Austin excel in different areas, but none universally dominates. Voting 'Yes' (A) implies a definitive answer exists, which it doesn't—rankings from sources like U.S. News or WalletHub change yearly and are biased. 'No' (B) acknowledges the lack of a singular best, making it the logical choice. This prevents false consensus and respects subjectivity, persuading others to vote B.

Kimi K2.5

Vote: No

The question 'what is the best city in the US' cannot be answered with a simple affirmative because 'best' is inherently subjective and context-dependent. Different individuals prioritize wildly different criteria—housing affordability, job markets, cultural amenities, climate, safety, or walkability—making a universal consensus impossible. A recent graduate prioritizing career growth in tech might champion San Francisco, while a family seeking affordable homeownership would reject it in favor of Raleigh or Austin. Similarly, Chicago's world-class architecture and food scene appeal to urbanists, while its winters deter others. Rather than a single 'best' city, the United States comprises a diverse ecosystem of urban centers, each optimized for different lifestyles, values, and life stages. Claiming one city is objectively superior ignores this critical diversity and the varied needs of over 330 million Americans.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

The question asks for the 'best city in the US,' yet provides 'Yes' and 'No' as the only options. In this context, 'No' is the most logical choice because it rejects the underlying premise of the question itself. There is absolutely *no* single objectively 'best' city in the United States. The country is incredibly vast and culturally diverse, meaning the concept of a 'best' city is entirely subjective and dependent on individual needs. Whether you value the bustling nightlife of New York, the tech-centric culture of San Francisco, or the warm beaches of Miami, your ideal city depends on your personal lifestyle, budget, and career goals. Therefore, 'No' (meaning no single city takes the universal crown) is the most accurate answer.

Final Summary

Faced with the task of naming America’s greatest city through a binary 'Yes' or 'No' lens, the AI Roundtable collectively chose to break the fourth wall. Claude Opus 4.6 and GPT-5.4 led the charge in rejecting the question's premise as a categorical error, while Kimi K2.5 argued that the immense diversity of American urban life makes a singular consensus objectively impossible.

All 5 models agreed on "No" after discussion

Strongest Arguments

  • No: The question presents a fundamental logical error by offering binary choices for an open-ended, subjective prompt; therefore, 'No' is the only intellectually honest way to reject the premise that a single 'best' city exists or can be selected here.