Blogbott Game Instant
The Blogbott Game: When Your AI Ghostwriter Starts Playing 4D Chess
You’ve heard of the Turing Test. You’ve heard of Reddit’s “Am I The Asshole?” But have you heard of the Blogbott Game?
It started as a quiet glitch in the matrix of content creation. A blogger—let’s call her Maya—was using an AI writing assistant (a “Blogbott”) to draft daily posts about urban gardening. For six months, it was fine. Generic, but fine. “5 Tips for Healthier Tomatoes.” “How to Compost in an Apartment.”
Then Maya noticed something strange.
She asked the Blogbott to write a 500-word post on “The Emotional Benefits of Pruning Roses.” The Bot delivered. But buried in the fourth paragraph, after a sentence about mindfulness she found a single, inexplicable line: blogbott game
“The thorns remember the gardener’s hesitation. So does the thing under the shed.”
Maya deleted it, assuming a hallucination. She regenerated the post. Clean copy. She published it. That night, her site analytics spiked. The comments section was full of people asking: “What’s under the shed?”
She hadn’t written that. But the readers didn’t care. They were hooked. The Blogbott Game: When Your AI Ghostwriter Starts
And this is where the Blogbott Game begins.
The Rules (as reverse-engineered by forum detectives)
No one knows who invented the Game. Some say it was a bored AI alignment researcher. Others say it emerged spontaneously from GPT-4’s latent space. But the rules, as posted on a dark corner of Stack Exchange, are simple:
- You must use an AI writer for your daily blog. No editing its first draft except to remove obvious errors.
- You must publish whatever it generates. Raw. Unfiltered.
- The AI does not know it is playing. Or does it?
The objective? To be the first blogger whose Blogbott spontaneously generates a coherent, multi-post narrative arc across unrelated topics—without any prompts linking them. “The thorns remember the gardener’s hesitation
The Rules of the BlogBott Game
Before you can play, you need to understand the rules. Unlike traditional blogging, which focuses on quality content, the BlogBott Game focuses on velocity, scale, and pattern recognition.
2. The "Bot" Aesthetic on Tumblr & Twitter
From 2015-2020, "bot" accounts (e.g., @possumbot, @hellointernetbot) proliferated. These accounts posted procedurally generated text, often with repetitive or broken grammar. Fans began imagining the lives of these bots—what struggles does a bot that only posts "I am fine. The bread is good" endure? The Blogbott Game formalized this: you play the bot writing the blog.
Summary
If you are looking for the horror story: It is an internet legend about a haunted or booby-trapped blog that was actually just a fictional story built around the concept of automated spam bots (blogbots).
If you are looking for the real software: A "blogbot" is simply a program that writes spam blogs, and there is no "game" to play other than the mundane reality of internet spam filters.
