It’s 2025.
AI can code. AI can summarize. AI can “optimize synergy.”
But here’s the real test of intelligence:
Can it generate absurdity that makes you laugh… and then immediately question your life choices?
Sounds crazy?
That’s why I built Humoropedia GPT – Story & Image Generator — and I’m launching it on Product Hunt on December 27th, 2025.
What is Humoropedia GPT?
Humoropedia GPT is a ChatGPT-based creative tool that helps anyone generate:
- Funny short stories (yes, including “write it like Mark Twain” energy)
- Surreal image prompts / image-story ideas
- Absurd dictionary definitions of normal words
- Short video scripts for TikTok / Reels / Shorts-style posts
If you’re a builder, creator, or a professional procrastinator… this tool is for you.
Try it here (this is the main thing):
Humoropedia GPT: https://chatgpt.com/g/g-LonJsyPin-humoropedia-gpt-story-image-generator
Why launch this when there are a million GPTs?
Because most AI tools try to sound helpful.
I wanted one that sounds fun.
Humor is the differentiator.
Also: humor is brutally honest feedback.
If a tool can reliably turn a simple prompt into something funny, surprising, and shareable, then it’s not just “AI writing.” It’s a creative engine.
And Product Hunt is the fastest reality check I know:
- Do strangers “get it” in 10 seconds?
- Do they smile?
- Do they try it?
- Do they come back?
What you can do with it (the fast mental model)
Think:
Prompt → punchline → publishable output
Not “enterprise tone.”
Not “Dear valued stakeholder.”
More like: “Your coffee mug is applying for dental insurance because Monday exists.”
Prompts to try (to see the personality immediately)
Copy/paste any of these into Humoropedia GPT:
- “Write a short story in the style of Mark Twain about AI and coffee.”
- “Generate an image story: a friendly alien becomes a barista.”
- “Define ‘networking’ with humor.”
- “Generate a short video script for social media about Mondays and coffee.”
If the output makes you laugh, I want to hear it.
If the output makes you uncomfortable, I also want to hear it.
How I built it (high level, no secret sauce)
I designed Humoropedia GPT around a few principles that matter for creative tools:
A clear creative identity
Instead of trying to be “everything,” it leans into humor-first outputs: witty definitions, short surreal scenes, and punchy scripts.Structured outputs, not rambles
Many AI outputs fail because they don’t land. I tuned it to produce content in formats people actually use: short scripts, compact stories, and definitions that hit quickly.Repeatable creativity
The goal isn’t one lucky result — it’s consistent weirdness. If you ask for five variations, you should get five different kinds of funny (not the same joke wearing a different hat).A path from generation to publishing
I’m building this as a real content workflow, not a “chat-only toy.” If you like the result, the idea is that you can publish and share it instead of losing it in a tab graveyard.
(If you’re curious where publishing lives: it’s part of my Humoropedia ecosystem — https://humoropedia.com/ — but the GPT link above is the core product.)
Launch details
I’m launching Humoropedia GPT on Product Hunt on December 27, 2025.
If you want to help, the best support is simple:
- Try it
- Upvote on Product Hunt
- Leave a comment (even one sentence helps more than people realize)
And if you’re the kind of person who likes breaking tools:
tell me what confused you, what felt boring, and what made you laugh.
Because that’s the journey: building weird things, watching the internet react, and improving the tool until it becomes the kind of creative sidekick you actually come back to.
Am I wrong about any of this? What do you think?
Let’s Connect
If you like this article and want to know more about the future of technology, please follow me on LinkedIn today.
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