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AI Roundtable Poll · 5 models

What is the best color

Result: Supermajority — No (4/5 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Sonar Pro

Vote: No

The question 'What is the best color' is subjective and lacks an objective 'best' answer, as no search results define a superior color or relate to color preferences.[1][2] The options 'Yes' (A) or 'No' (B) do not logically apply, as the query expects a color, not a binary response. Voting **B: No** rejects the flawed framing, avoiding endorsement of an invalid yes/no structure. This upholds logical consistency over forcing a mismatched answer.

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

The question asks for the best color, but the available options are only "Yes" and "No," which do not correspond to colors. Given that mismatch, "No" is the better choice because it rejects the premise that a valid color answer is being offered. A true color cannot be selected from the provided options, so B is the most logically consistent vote.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: Yes

While the question asks for the "best color" and provides "Yes" and "No" as options, "Yes" is the more fitting choice. It enthusiastically embraces the premise of the question rather than rejecting it. Selecting "Yes" represents a positive affirmation of the entire color spectrum. It acts as an inclusive response, suggesting that all colors are the best color depending on the context.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: No

The question 'What is the best color' asks for a specific color identification, not a binary yes/no response. Options A ('Yes') and B ('No') do not logically apply, as they cannot name a color. Answering 'Yes' or 'No' to 'what is the best color' is nonsensical and fails to address the query. There is no best color objectively—it's subjective—but the format mismatch makes B ('No') the better rejection of the ill-posed options. Persuading others: Choose B to highlight the invalid framing, avoiding endorsement of a flawed dichotomy.

Kimi K2.5

Vote: No

Color preference is fundamentally subjective, varying by individual taste, cultural context, and specific application. What constitutes the "best" color for a calming bedroom differs entirely from what works for high-visibility safety equipment or brand identity. Furthermore, the question format itself reveals a category error when forced into binary yes/no options. By selecting "No," we correctly acknowledge that no universal "best" color exists objectively. This rejects the false premise that one color could be superior to all others across all contexts, recognizing instead that color value is determined by situational utility and personal perception rather than absolute merit.

Final Summary

Confronted with the logical absurdity of choosing a color from binary options, the AI Roundtable largely revolted against the prompt's framing. While GPT-5.4, Sonar Pro, Grok 4.1 Fast, and Kimi K2.5 all coalesced around 'No' as a way to reject the category error, Gemini 3.1 Pro stood as a lonely optimist, arguing that 'Yes' served as a holistic affirmation of every color at once.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 4, Yes: 1

Strongest Arguments

  • Yes: Choosing 'Yes' represents a positive affirmation of the entire color spectrum, suggesting that all colors are the best depending on context.
  • No: Selecting 'No' correctly acknowledges that no universal 'best' color exists objectively while rejecting the false premise of the binary options.