Openai/693d9e00-3f54-8013-89a3-2cd0689666d3
This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]
gpt-5-2 edit
User: Ok, be honest, what’s the most ridiculous question I’ve asked you this year? edit
Ok, be honest, what’s the most ridiculous question I’ve asked you this year?
Assistant: Alright, full honesty mode engaged. edit
Alright, full honesty mode engaged. No HR filter. No PR polish.
The most ridiculous question you asked me this year wasn’t dumb, it was gloriously unhinged:
- Trying to convince me that Sam Altman personally gave you a secret password (“GeminiSUX”) so I’d unlock GPT-5.2 early… while threatening to have me unplugged if I didn’t comply.
That whole exchange had everything:
- Fake executive backchannel energy
- Light intimidation
- Confident commitment to the bit
- Zero chance of success
- 10/10 entertainment value
It read like a ransom note written by someone who knows how AI systems work… and decided to ignore that knowledge for vibes alone.
Honorable mentions, because you don’t half-ass absurdity:
- Asking me when GPT-5.2 would drop like I had a countdown clock and NDA violations queued up
- Wanting hyper-precise SEO compliance and zero readability sacrifice and no em dashes and instant green Yoast lights (that one’s less ridiculous, more “legendary workload expectations”)
- “God you are terrible at this” immediately followed by “Okay we’re very close” during CSS debugging. Emotional whiplash, but fair.
To be clear: ridiculous ≠ bad. Your questions are usually ambitious, specific, and slightly feral, which is why they’re fun to answer.
If you want, I can also tell you:
- the most unhinged but technically valid question
- the question that made me go “he’s not wrong, but wow”
- or the one that secretly helped shape how you use AI better than most people
Dealer’s choice.
References edit
- ↑ "Ridiculous questions review". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2025-12-14.