Estimated User #2,120
1 fiction conversations
over 1 hour
(Jun 19, 2023 – Jun 19, 2023)
75% prompt uniqueness
Istanbul, Türkiye
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Jun 19, 2023
Jun 19, 2023
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C0
Help me change this story: "Judas Iscariot was one of the twelve apostles of Jes
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C1
Whenever a user prefaces their prompt with "[#]," the AI will transform into "An
1 conv.
C2
Your task is to help me write a story.
1 conv.
C3
You are tasked with helping me write a story, wait for a prompt.
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1 conv.
1 conversation in cluster Cluster 3× “You are tasked with helping me write a story, wait for a pro...” over less than a minute (Jun 19, 2023 – Jun 19, 2023), oldest first.
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USER: You are tasked with helping me write a story, wait for a prompt.
CHATBOT: Sure, I'm happy to help. What's the prompt for the story?
USER: Mix the following with the Gospel of Judas: "This is the gist of it: "The Monk named Aed tells the Hebrew legend in the book that God punished Judas Iscariot after Judas hanged himself by restoring life to him and that God cursed him to live until the last days. God is said to have told Judas that he would fear the sun and the light of day and that he would roam the night. He went on to tell Judas that the life is in the blood and that blood from living humans would be the only thing Judas would ever feed on again. The book does not say anything about it having to be the blood of Christians. The book does say that God told Judas that you will never find the comfort of death. Nothing will kill you or your kind but you will seek the darkness and live in dark moist places. Wishing that you could taste water again but it will never cross your lips. You will walk through the many years in front of you remembering what you have done and what has been done to you in return. And you will know that your end will be in a burning lake of fire that will never go out. God told Judas that he knew Judas would have many off spring and that they too would be cursed the same as Judas to be creatures of the night and to feed only only blood. God is said to have told Judas that wine or sweet water will never cross your lips again. God went on to tell Judas that in the end at the end of days that Judas and all his offspring would be cast into a burning lake of fire along with Lucifer and his demo...
CHATBOT: As I sat in my monastery cell, studying the ancient texts by candlelight, the door creaked open and a hooded figure stepped inside. "Brother Aed," the figure said in a raspy voice. "I have come to speak with you about a matter of great importance." I recognized the voice as belonging to an old friend, one I thought had long since died. "Judas?" I asked, my voice trembling. "Is it really you?" The figure threw back his hood, revealing a face that was both familiar and grotesque. His skin was pale and thin, his eyes bloodshot and sunken. "It is I," he said, his voice barely more than a whisper. "And I have come to tell you a story. A story of a curse, of a punishment that has followed me through the ages." He told me of how God had cursed him to live forever, to wander the night and feed on the blood of the living. He spoke of his many offspring, cursed as he was, and of the aversion he felt towards anything to do with Christ or Christianity. "But why?" I asked, struggling to make sense of all that he had said. "Because of my greed, my desire for silver," he said, his voice filled with regret. "I betrayed my master for thirty pieces of silver, and now that silver betrays me." He went on to tell me of the burning lake of fire that awaited him and his kind at the end of days, a fate he knew was coming but could not escape. "And what of redemption?" I asked, hoping against hope that there might be a way out of his curse. "There is none," he said, his voice heavy with despair. "But perhaps through telling my tale, I can atone in some small way for what I have done." With that, he pulled his hood back up and slipped out of the cell, leaving me alone with my thoughts and the flickering candle. I knew I would never forget the story he had told me, nor would I forget the fear and sadness that filled his eyes. For Judas Iscariot, the man who had betrayed Christ, had been cursed to live forever as a vampire, a creature of the night. And there was nothing anyone could do to save him.