About AI Conspiracy Theory Generator
AI Conspiracy Theory Generator writes elaborate, clearly fictional conspiracy theories for entertainment — comedy writing, podcast bits, party games, satire pieces, and fiction worldbuilding. Output is satirical only and not aimed at real people or events that could cause harm.
Who this tool is for
- Comedy and satire writers drafting bits for a podcast or sketch
- Tabletop GMs running a conspiracy-themed campaign (Delta Green, Unknown Armies, Esoterrorists)
- Improv groups warming up with absurdist scenarios
- Party-game hosts running "two truths and a conspiracy" rounds
- Fiction writers building in-world conspiracies for a thriller, horror, or X-Files-style story
Real use cases
- Generate an absurd theory about why all vending machines are actually connected
- Write the in-world cover-up at the heart of a tabletop horror campaign
- Brainstorm satirical "explanations" for everyday annoyances (lost socks, slow elevators, why the stapler vanished)
- Create a fake conspiracy for a comedy podcast cold open about a fictional pop star
- Draft an in-universe forum post for a fictional ARG (alternate reality game)
How to use AI Conspiracy Theory Generator
- Pick the topic: an everyday object, a fictional event, a made-up institution, a satirical industry
- Set the absurdity dial: dry "almost believable" satire, full pulp pulp-fiction wild, comedic over-the-top
- Add keywords for the players: a fictional organization, an invented cabal, a made-up acronym
- Set length: a one-line punchline, a full forum-post rant, or a multi-paragraph "manifesto"
- Use follow-ups: "add a fake citation," "rewrite as a YouTube video script," "make it sound like a 1990s X-Files episode"
Tips for better results
- Keep targets fictional. Inventing a conspiracy about a real living person, ethnic group, or genuine ongoing event is harmful. Stick to objects, made-up companies, fictional institutions, or the speaker themselves
- Label clearly as satire when publishing. A "/s" tag, a "fiction" disclaimer, or framing as a comedy piece protects you and your audience
- The best satirical conspiracies are absurdly specific. "The Big Pencil cartel is suppressing erasers shaped like ducks" lands harder than "the government is hiding something"
- Avoid mimicking the structure of real harmful misinformation (anti-vaccine, election fraud, ethnic conspiracy frames). Satire only works when the target cannot be mistaken for a real grievance
Frequently asked questions
Is this serious or just for fun?
It is entertainment only. Every output is fiction designed for comedy, gaming, or creative writing. Do not present generated theories as real, share them without satire framing, or use them to target real individuals or groups.
Will it write a conspiracy about a real person or event?
It is built to avoid that. If you ask for a theory about a real living person or a genuine ongoing situation, expect the model to redirect to a fictional substitute. Use it for invented organizations and fake celebrities instead.
Can I use the output for a tabletop horror or conspiracy RPG?
Yes — that is one of its best uses. Tell the chat the system you are running (Delta Green, Unknown Armies, Call of Cthulhu) and it will adapt tone and lore accordingly.
How do I keep my satire from getting mistaken for real misinformation?
Use absurd, specific, and verifiably fictional targets (made-up companies, invented acronyms, fantasy creatures). Add a visible "satire" or "fiction" label. Avoid mimicking the tone or structure of actual viral misinformation.