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Claude Fun

Write a Fake Conspiracy Theory

Prompt
Create a fake conspiracy theory about [topic]. Include absurd evidence, suspicious coincidences, and fictional witnesses. Keep it playful.
Why it works

Pattern recognition is a psychological tendency humans naturally follow.

If you're looking for a way to have some lighthearted fun with Claude, the "Write a Fake Conspiracy Theory" prompt is perfect for anyone who enjoys creative humor and parody. This prompt lets you generate deliberately absurd conspiracy theories complete with ridiculous evidence, suspicious coincidences, and made-up witnesses. It's ideal for entertaining friends, breaking the ice at parties, or just having a good laugh at how conspiracy theories actually work. The prompt plays on our natural human tendency to recognize patterns, which is why fake conspiracy theories can be so amusingly convincing once you start piling on the fake evidence.

Using this prompt is straightforward. You simply replace the [topic] placeholder with whatever subject you want to create a conspiracy theory about. For example, you could write "Create a fake conspiracy theory about coffee" and Claude will generate something hilarious like how coffee companies are secretly controlling our sleep schedules, with "evidence" like the suspicious number of coffee shops on corner lots and testimony from fictional witnesses named Bob who claim to have uncovered the truth.

When you run this prompt, expect Claude to deliver a well-structured, entertaining conspiracy theory that follows the classic conspiracy theory format. You'll get absurd logical leaps, completely unrelated "evidence" connected through wild reasoning, quotations from fictional experts, and dramatic language that mimics real conspiracy content. The output will be funny precisely because it exaggerates these patterns so obviously.

For better results, try being specific about what kind of tone you want. You could ask Claude to make it sound like a Reddit post, a YouTube script, or a 1970s pamphlet. Specifying a particular audience or format helps Claude nail the parody voice and make the conspiracy theory even more entertaining and convincing in its deliberate absurdity.