If you roleplay or do fanfic or write any story—original or some fanfic of an already existing story—the dialogue sounds awful, and that’s true for every AI: ChatGPT, Claude, Grok, etc. Mainly, the dialogue is unbelievably repetitive, and then characters either have an overreaction to something or an underreaction to something. The dialogue sounds truly, truly awful. No one really has a distinct personality; they all sound the same, repeat the same lines, and the dialogue is cringelord-tier. It doesn’t sound like real, actual people talking.


A ton of reasons
you’re likely using one of the front end mass market llm models that have been absolutely nerfed to all hell by backend program levels prompts to make it avoid all forms of tension, narrative included.
you’re probably not using a tool like silly tavern or another tool to help control the “personality” and prompting of the chosen llm model which is going to lead to generic results
you may not be engineering your prompts correctly to best manipulate the behavior of the llm
Without knowing what llm you’re using and what the prompt was I can really only take an educated guess. I would highly suggest that you take some time to actually learn more about and understand llms before you use them for really anything. They’re a tool, not a person you can actually communicate or reason with.
They’re essentially a predictive algorithm uses massive amounts of data to predict which words should come after which words. It’s not alive, it has no understanding of what it’s actually saying and has no real capacity for emotion
Also just as friendly advice, this is definitely not the platform to ask for advice or information on llms. Most people here despise them, justifiably so.
I personally don’t hate the technology, I hate the idiots running the technology and using it for nefarious purposes and trying to cram it down everyone’s throats while simultaneously draining our planet of water and resources with it.
There are some communities here that study and discuss them in depth, I encourage you to do your own research.