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Oldbayislove t1_j8wu3t5 wrote

i used in in my D&D campaign. I had a fey creature that spoke in rhymes so i just told it to write a rhyme about the party defeating a vampire. It wasnt high art by any means, but with a little editing (it liked to rhyme a word with itself) it was a lot faster than coming up with my own shitty rhyme.

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Myrdraall t1_j8x8wkv wrote

It's still impressive:

write a short rhyme about a goblin who missed an attack without rhyming a word with itself

A goblin sprang and swung his blade,

His aim was true or so he prayed,

But alas, his foe had deftly swayed,

And the goblin's attack had been waylaid.

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Oldbayislove t1_j8xf4jn wrote

yeah it worked really well. I think i changed a couple words just to match the events better. I also had it make jokes like Statler and Waldorf. But that was just for fun.

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dumb_password_loser t1_j8wzruc wrote

Ah yes, I've had fun with poetry too.
Rhyming in languages other than English seems difficult. I asked it for a silly rhyme in Dutch, but it didn't rhyme at all. But if I translate it to English word for word, it does rhyme. So there's something going on there.

I also tried asking it to write in 13th century Flemish, but that didn't work at all. However if I ask it to write in the style of certain medieval Flemish texts, it does! (at least it writes something that looks like middle Dutch)

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allucaneat t1_j8xkb8h wrote

You can just tell it to not rhyme words with themselves and rewrite it and it’ll do too. It’s a wonderful tool for this. :)

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