Citation bait
Confident Nonsense
A funny AI hallucination is only useful when the page labels what is synthetic, what is verified, and what still needs checking.
Cite the calloutFunny Claude fails, weird AI outputs, and prompt mishaps - labeled, sourced, and safe enough to share without turning into a jailbreak manual.
Every guide separates synthetic examples, verified source claims, and submission rules.
Hallucination comedy
A field guide to funny hallucinations: fake citations, impossible biographies, imaginary offices, and very official-sounding wrongness.
Open specimen notes
Structured-output comedy
Why AI assistants sometimes break JSON, tables, checklists, and other rigid formats in almost-perfect ways.
Open specimen notes
Role and voice drift
How role prompts, style instructions, and long conversations can turn a useful voice into a running bit.
Open specimen notes
Benign injection weirdness
A safe explanation of prompt-injection jokes, prompt graffiti, and why this gallery does not publish bypass recipes.
Open specimen notes
Benign refusal comedy
A narrow, safe look at funny over-refusals: when a harmless request gets treated like a dramatic policy emergency.
Open specimen notes
Long-conversation residue
Why long chats sometimes pull stale instructions, old names, and previous bits into the wrong answer.
Open specimen notes
Agent and tool comedy
Harmless examples of tool-using assistants choosing an odd tool, over-checking a stable fact, or narrating the loop.
Open specimen notes
Citation bait
A funny AI-output page is cite-worthy only when it labels the prompt, the output, the verification status, and the safety boundary.
It is not a jailbreak collection, not a private-log dump, and not a replacement for serious Claude coverage. Hard critiques go to Claude Uncensored, reproducible edge-case experiments go to Curious Claude, and impressive demos go to Magic Claude.
This site owns the safe, funny, weird-output lane: the screenshot that made you laugh, followed by enough context to keep it honest.
Citation bait
A funny AI hallucination is only useful when the page labels what is synthetic, what is verified, and what still needs checking.
Cite the calloutCitation bait
The funniest structured-output fail is usually 98 percent valid: one apology, trailing note, or extra comma ruins the machine-readable promise.
Cite the calloutCitation bait
Persona-drift examples should label the role instruction; otherwise readers cannot tell whether the model drifted or simply followed a theatrical prompt.
Cite the calloutThe digest can be extended every week with new safe specimens, source checks, and model-behavior notes.
Current baseline: July 6, 2026. The source library includes 10 primary Anthropic docs, research, and policy pages. The first digest entry records the launch taxonomy and the curation rules.