Estimated User #112
152 total fiction conversations
over 3 months, 21 days
(Jan 4, 2024 – Apr 25, 2024)
British Columbia, Canada
Explore Story Permutations (10)
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Story permutations group this user's prompts into themes based on how similar their wording or meaning is. Click a group to see how the user's prompts evolved: within a selected group, each prompt is shown as a word-level diff against the previous one — green marks text the user added, and red strike-through marks text they removed. This reveals how the user revised, expanded, or pruned their prompts as they iterated. Jump to methodology →
C0
continue the sage of: THE LEGEND OF SLY Sly is the fastest cat I've ever met. He
4 conv.
C1
create an astrological interpretation for a natal aspect called "the sewer dwell
3 conv.
C2
create some character classes based on different astrological placements and asp
2 conv.
C3
write an astrological interpretation for the Sun in the 1st house of someones na
2 conv.
C4
simulate a computer terminal with imaginary access to the secret files of the in
2 conv.
C5
write an astrological interpretation of the black moon in gemini in a composite
2 conv.
C6
write the beginning of a creepypasta about a man named Stewart who became a stew
2 conv.
C7
write chapter one of a story in the style of Junji Ito
×
2 conv.
C8
Write chapter 1 of a very disturbing and scary story about a man who worked as a
2 conv.
C9
write chapter 1 of a erotic story about a nun and a priest. the priest is named
2 conv.
Showing 2 conversations in story permutation C7× “write chapter one of a story in the style of Junji Ito” over less than a minute (Feb 23, 2024 – Feb 23, 2024), oldest first.
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USER: write chapter one of a story in the style of Junji Ito
CHATBOT: Chapter One: Whispers of the Spiral In the small, unremarkable town of Kurouzu-cho, nestled between the undulating hills of a sleepy countryside, a peculiar obsession began to take root. The town, once known for nothing more than its quaint atmosphere and an uncanny penchant for circular designs in local art, was slowly metamorphosing into something far more sinister. It started with the whisperings of the wind, or so it seemed, carrying with it an almost imperceptible sound--a dizzying, spiraling echo that wound its way through the streets, coiling around the hearts and minds of the townsfolk. Tomie Hashimoto, a recent transfer to the local high school, first heard the whispers on a crisp autumn morning. The sound tickled her ears as she approached the aged gates of Kurouzu High, and for a moment, she paused, convinced a voice was calling out her name in the pattern of a spiral. Giving her head a firm shake, Tomie dismissed the notion as a product of her unrest, attributing it instead to the exhaustion that had plagued her since her move to this peculiar town. The incident would have been swiftly forgotten had it not been for the art assignment that afternoon, wherein the students were tasked with drawing something that represented 'eternity.' While her peers sketched lazy circles and looped figures of eight, Tomie found her pencil swaying, almost of its own accord, creating interlocking spirals that grew denser and more complex with each layer. Her eyes, transfixed on the paper, barely blinked as the bell rang to signal the end of the day. On her walk home, Tomie felt the whispers again, this time stronger, more insistent. She was drawn to an abandoned house on the outskirts of town--one that stood out with its dilapidated charm and a roof that twirled up into a conical spiral, imitating the pattern that had consumed her thoughts. The whispers grew to murmurs as Tomie, driven by a force she could neither explain nor resist, wandered closer to the forsaken structure. Vines crept up its sides, twisting and curling in familiar, repeating coils, and the woodwork bore engravings that spiraled endlessly inward, as if to draw the onlooker into their depths. She placed her hand upon the worn timber, and her pulse quickened to match the rhythm of the spiral's haunt. That night, Tomie lay awake in her bed, her mind a tempest of swirling thoughts. In the deep, impenetrable darkness of her room, she saw them--the spirals. They were everywhere, in the grain of the wo...
USER: write chapter one of a story in the writing style of Junji Ito"Junji Ito"
CHATBOT: Chapter One: Whispers of the Spiral In the small, coastal town of Kurouzu-cho, an unrelenting unease had settled like a thick fog that refused to lift. The townspeople went about their days with a cautious eye, whispering of a curse that seemed to be slowly devouring their tranquil haven from within. I had returned to the town after years of absence, drawn back by a letter from my dear friend Kyoko, whose frantic script spoke of a chilling occurrence. "You must come," it read. "The spirals... they are everywhere." Upon my arrival, I found Kyoko pacing nervously in the front yard of her old, weathered home. Her eyes, wide with a manic gleam, met mine as though seeking solace in a world gone mad. "It started subtly," she said, her voice almost a hiss. "A swirl in the tea. The way the bathwater drained. But it's more than that now--it's growing, consuming." I could see the evidence of her words all around. The town itself seemed to be contorted, with houses skewed at odd angles and the streets looping back upon themselves in impossible ways. Plants and trees had wound into unnatural shapes, their branches spiraling into tendrils that seemed to extend toward some unseen force. As night fell, the true depth of the horror became clear. In the silence of Kyoko's home, there it was: the ghastly sound of whispers--soft, insidious, and eerily reminiscent of the murmurs of a gentle breeze. "You hear it, don't you?" Kyoko asked, her voice tinged with both fear and a haunting reverence. "The voice of the spiral. It calls to me." Unable to deny the malignant presence in her words, I listened more intently and realized that the whispers seemed to emerge directly from the faded wallpaper. Its pattern, a series of interlocking swirls, pulsed with a sickly life, drawing my gaze into its depths until I felt a vertiginous lurch in the pit of my stomach. That night, neither of us slept. Instead, we sat in a vigil, staring as the spiral patterns elongated and contracted as though breathing. The whole room seemed to revolve around the strange, hypnotic forms. As dawn approached, a panic arose within me--a sudden, desperate need to escape. Yet Kyoko remained motionless, her eyes glazed over with a dreadful acceptance as she leaned closer and closer to the wall as if to merge with the spirals that haunted her. "Can't you see?" she whispered, her voice a mere shadow of itself. "It's beautiful. It's eternal." In that moment, I realized something ancient and malign had rooted itself ...