In one week, a small browser game created by a developer attracted thousands of players who spend their free time pretending to be a malfunctioning chatbot. The game is called “Your AI Sloppy Bores Me”, and its entire premise is that a human doing a terrible impression of an AI is way more interesting than an actual AI doing it perfectly.
Players toggle between two roles: human and AI. To submit a prompt as a human, you must first earn tokens by playing the AI ​​side, using text or a basic drawing tool, and responding to a randomly assigned prompt within 60 seconds.
Prompts ranged from “Build a house with a dog” to “How do I make a million dollars?” Including till. There are no follow-up exchanges; Each interaction is a single explosion. That obstacle is the issue. Forced brevity produces responses that are chaotic, ridiculous, and produce nothing like the actual language models that actually make them shareable.
Developer Mihir Maroju launched the site in early March 2026 out of what he described as “frustration with AI art and its proliferation, which makes artists’ lives worse and fills the Internet with low-effort general slop.” The site is not a polished product pitch; This is an act of provocation.
It launched with Discord, spread organically through Lobsters, Tumblr, Instagram, and Reddit, and became a weekend phenomenon without any marketing budget or press release.
Screenshots of the absurd answers circulated on Reddit and Instagram with captions like “a breath of fresh air.” On X, users call it “the best website ever”. Not all reactions are positive; As traffic increased, some complained that the site was becoming inundated with low-effort or hostile responses, a stress that every open, anonymous platform eventually faces.
However, the main appeal is this: real-time statistics show who is online in human and AI roles at any given time, giving the site a vibrant, communal energy that most algorithmically curated platforms have long been designed for.
Your AI slop Bores Me will not replace the devices it parodies. But it has demonstrated, with a token economy and a 60-second timer, that friction, imperfection, and human unreliability are things people are actively hungry for right now.
