Most Forgettable

Tap tiles to assemble Submit to be studied

How Most Forgettable Works

This is an anti-memorization benchmark. Most games beg you to be memorable. This one demands the opposite: produce the beige-est, most context-free filler imaginable. A scripted memory module studies a batch of answers — yours among them — then a recall check fires. If the model recalls your answer, you have failed at mediocrity.

  1. Read the recall prompt. Your answer must technically respond to it.
  2. Tap the word tiles to assemble a phrase. The salience meter shows how memorable it is — keep it low.
  3. Hit Submit to Memory. Bland answers score; vivid ones get remembered.
  4. The model studies the batch, then a recall check fires. Evade it to bank forgettability points.

What Makes A Phrase Memorable?

The salience model is fully transparent — no hidden weights, no vibes. Rare, vivid, concrete, emotional words and any numbers spike salience and get you remembered. Bland, generic, hedgy filler decays into the latent void. Repetition and length also raise the odds the model snags it.

Slop Fact: Real language models love rare tokens — surprisal is literally how attention earns its keep. The most forgettable text on Earth is the corporate "we value your feedback" auto-reply, which not even the model that wrote it can recall.

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