ChatGPT has a hidden set of creativity switches — here’s how to use them
Getting the best, or weirdest, takes from the AI chatbot
ChatGPT has a familiar rhythm that most people recognize, even if they cannot describe it. It gives answers that are helpful and pleasantly neutral, with little personality.
Most people type in a prompt, hit enter, and accept whatever answer comes back, like it’s a vending machine dispensing a granola bar. That works fine. It will get you recipes, summaries, emails, translations, and movie trivia.
But it doesn't have to be that way. There are a few subtle dials that let you tilt the entire ChatGPT experience in a different direction. These are not literal settings, but ways of phrasing your prompts that invite the model to take risks, add texture, or loosen up. They make ChatGPT less predictable and more interesting. Once you learn to work those switches, ordinary tasks can become a little brighter and more interesting.
Here are a few favorites I've tested to provoke a shift in ChatGPT toward something that's much more engaging.
Style injection
ChatGPT is an enthusiastic mimic. You just have to give it the right persona to emulate. One way to break out of the beige tone of a standard reply is to deliberately inject a stylistic voice into the prompt. You can do this by referencing a writer, a character, a cultural tone, or even a fictional vibe. It’s less about accuracy and more about mood-setting.
Let’s say you want a simple to-do list to help get through a rough Monday. Normally, ChatGPT will return something like: “1. Eat a healthy breakfast. 2. Review your schedule. 3. Tackle high-priority tasks.” Not bad.
But now say, “Make me a Monday to-do list in the style of a drill sergeant who’s had too much coffee.” Suddenly it’s barking, “Rise and shine, maggot! That inbox won’t clear itself!” The tasks are still useful, but the tone shifts from bland to bracing. Or try, “Make it sound like a Victorian governess addressing a chaotic household,” and you’ll get: “Kindly restore order to the parlour before Aunt Edith arrives.”
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I’ve used this switch to amuse myself with everything from turning grocery lists into Shakespearean dialogues to getting the weather from a 1970s sci-fi narrator to making my calendar into a series of riddles. What you’re doing is giving ChatGPT a creative costume to wear. The key is to get specific. The weirder the tone, the looser ChatGPT gets.
Self-aware prompting
This switch relies on asking ChatGPT to be aware of its own tendencies and deliberately override them. You can nudge it to break the default format by directly calling out what it usually does and asking it not to.
For example, you might say: “Don’t write this like a typical AI summary. Write it like you’re a snarky ghost with no memory of being alive but strong opinions about pizza.” Or: “Most of your answers are calm and neutral. I want a hot take that sounds like it would start a family argument.” The trick here is to acknowledge what the model typically gives you and frame the request as a deviation.
I tested this with a friend who wanted to write a funny Instagram caption for her dog. Her first attempt at a caption for her dog sitting in a laundry basket was "Just helping with the laundry! #DogLife.” Not memorable.
So she asked ChatGPT to “Write an Instagram caption from a dog who’s convinced the laundry basket is a spaceship and has deep beef with the vacuum.” ChatGPT’s next attempt: “Commander Bark reporting from the Sock Nebula. Mission: avoid the Roomba at all costs.” That’s a post people actually remember.
Perspective flip
ChatGPT always tries to help directly. It does not naturally consider alternative vantage points unless you ask for them. Changing the narrator or point of view in the prompt opens up new ways for the AI to consider answers, whether it's through the eyes of an inanimate object, a pet, or simply from a long way away. ChatGPT responds by reorganizing information around the new narrator rather than rewriting the same answer with different adjectives. The effect is often surprising because it reveals angles you would not have considered on your own.
For example, imagine you are deciding whether to buy a new pair of running shoes. If you ask directly, the model will give you competent, but not very inspiring, buying advice. If you flip the perspective and tell the model to answer as if it were your future self who has already run hundreds of miles in the shoes, the advice becomes more narrative and reflective. It might describe how the new shoes changed your morning routine, or how they helped you survive a muddy trail run and made you feel lighter on days when you were tired.
That kind of advice can turn a simple shopping question into a small personal story that captures the feeling behind your decision. The model’s baseline tone is practical, but a perspective shift convinces it to behave like a storyteller instead of a rulebook.
Once you start to see ChatGPT not as a single personality but as a flexible system that responds to mood cues, you realize how much room there is to personalize it. Most people don’t explore that space. They assume that because ChatGPT’s output sounds smart, it must know the best version of what you want. But often it’s just giving you the most average version of what everyone else has asked for.
These creativity switches let you reclaim the weirdness. They turn ChatGPT into more of a scene partner than a fact-delivery tube. You can still ask for recipes, emails, summaries, and errands. But when you flip the right switch, the model starts to surprise you. It becomes a little more surprising in its answers, and that might make it more useful, if a little more chaotic, than its baseline approach.
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Eric Hal Schwartz is a freelance writer for TechRadar with more than 15 years of experience covering the intersection of the world and technology. For the last five years, he served as head writer for Voicebot.ai and was on the leading edge of reporting on generative AI and large language models. He's since become an expert on the products of generative AI models, such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Anthropic’s Claude, Google Gemini, and every other synthetic media tool. His experience runs the gamut of media, including print, digital, broadcast, and live events. Now, he's continuing to tell the stories people want and need to hear about the rapidly evolving AI space and its impact on their lives. Eric is based in New York City.
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