



LarpGPT
1.6K posts

@tryLarpGPT
Your favorite influencers favorite tool. WE DO NOT HAVE A MEMECOIN













I scrolled TikTok for 20 minutes last night and slowly realized something that made me put my phone down. None of these women exist. Not one. The redhead applying sunscreen on the balcony. The brunette in the green sports bra doing the heart shape with her hands. The blonde stretching in front of the bathroom mirror. The girl on the floor laughing into the camera while holding the bottle. Every single one of them is AI generated. Every account is fake. SunscreenAddict. ActiveGlow. concentration.7. obsessed. extra. Names designed to sound like real twenty-something skincare girls. Bios written to read like every other lifestyle creator on the platform. Posting schedules timed to mimic human behavior. The entire feed I was watching, the one TikTok served me when I searched a single product, was a coordinated swarm of synthetic influencers all selling the same bottle. Hundreds of thousands of views. Each. 512K on one. 358K on another. 232K. 200K. 199K. People in the comments tagging their friends. "Need this." "Where can I buy." Real humans, having real reactions, to women who do not exist. Let me walk you through what's actually going on here, because the mechanics are wild. Someone, or more likely a small team, generated a roster of fake "influencers." They picked diverse looks on purpose. Blonde, brunette, Asian, redhead, Black, mixed. Different body types. Different home aesthetics. Different lighting. Some on balconies. Some in bathrooms. Some in bedrooms. So the feed looks organic, like the product is having a moment with every demographic. Each "creator" got an account, a name, a personality, and a posting schedule. They probably look at their analytics dashboard the same way a real creator would. Then the same product gets reviewed across all of them. Same talking points. Same captions. Same hashtag set. Twenty different "real girls" all converging on the same recommendation in the same week. To the algorithm, this looks like a genuine trend. To you scrolling at midnight, it looks like every girl on the internet is suddenly obsessed with this one bottle. That's the trick. It's not that one fake account got views. It's that twenty of them did, simultaneously, creating the illusion of cultural agreement. Manufactured consensus. It's the oldest marketing tactic on earth, just executed at a scale and speed no human team could match six months ago. And here's the part that broke my brain. You cannot tell. I mean it. I have a developer eye for this stuff. I look at AI-generated content for a living. I had to zoom in on three of these to be sure. The hands give it away if you look closely. Sometimes the bottle label is slightly malformed. Sometimes the reflection in a bathroom mirror doesn't match. But on a phone, mid-scroll, at two in the morning, with one thumb? You'd never catch it. Nobody is catching it. The whole "AI looks fake" defense people had a year ago is gone. Dead. The current generation of image-to-video models renders skin texture, fabric folds, depth of field, and natural movement in a way that slides right past the radar. Three things to take from this, because the implications are bigger than skincare. The trust signal you used your whole life — "I saw a real person say it" — is no longer reliable on social media. You're being marketed to by ghosts. Every product category is about to get this treatment. Skincare is just the early adopter because the visual content is easy. Supplements are next. Then fitness. Then home goods. By next year, "influencer marketing" will be a phrase that needs a footnote. If you're a real creator competing for views right now, your competition isn't other humans anymore. It's a server farm in someone's apartment generating 100 versions of you while you sleep. I'm not saying any of this is good or bad. I'm saying it's already happening. Right now. On the device in your hand. And almost nobody is paying attention. Save this post. Show it to anyone who still thinks they can spot AI content in the wild. The girls in your For You page have rooms that don't exist, in houses that were never built, holding products they've never touched. Keep scrolling. But scroll knowing.


