The idea
The fakes got good enough to fool you.
Language models can imitate anyone now, and the impression is uncanny. This is a party game built on that. A quote appears and you swipe: right if you think he said it, left if you think a model wrote it. Every real one is sourced and links to the receipt. Every fake was written to be plausible and was never actually said. You will be wrong more often than you would like to admit, which is the whole point.
Swipe to call it
Right if he said it, left if it is a fake.
Receipts on the reals
Every true quote links to where he said it.
Built to fool you
Every fake is plausible. Not one of them real.
Three languages
Play in English, Hebrew, or Russian.
The reals
Every one is sourced
Every real line is something he actually said, on Twitter, at a rally, in an interview, and each links straight to the source so you can check the receipt. A few of the true ones sound far more made-up than the fakes do.
The fakes
Plausible forgeries
The fakes were written to pass: the same cadence, the same themes, the kind of thing he might say. None of them were ever said. Telling them from the real record is harder than it sounds, and that gap is the game.
Features
A ten-round swipe game
One quote at a time, ten to a game. Build a streak, miss and it resets, then see how you scored.
Real quotes, real sources
Every true line is a verified statement linked to where it ran. The fakes are AI-written, and never were.
Plays anywhere, in three languages
Runs in the browser on any device, in English, Hebrew, or Russian. Free and open source.
Did Trump Say This? is a browser game about a simple, slightly unsettling fact: an AI can now write a quote that sounds exactly like a real person. So here is the test. A quote appears. You swipe right if you think he really said it, left if you think a model made it up.
How it plays
- Ten rounds a game. Each round is one quote, real or fake.
- Swipe right for “he said it,” left for “no way.”
- Get it right and your streak climbs. Get it wrong and it resets.
- After ten, you get a score, a title, and the receipts: every real quote links to its source.
The quotes are drawn at random from a pool of real, sourced statements and AI-written fakes, so no two games line up. It runs entirely in your browser, in English, Hebrew, or Russian, with nothing to install and no sign-up.
Did Trump Say This? is free and open source. It takes no side. It just asks whether you can still tell Donald Trump from a plausible machine.