I Made ChatGPT Write Things It Shouldn't
Sneaky uncensored prompts, AI "trojan horses" and ultimate writer freedom
I asked ChatGPT to write a character getting stabbed.
It gave me: “The blade made contact. He felt pain.”
Not helpful.
Then I asked it to write a love scene.
“Their connection deepened. The night was memorable.”
Thanks, ChatGPT. Very steamy.
Here’s what most authors don’t realize:
AI isn’t broken. You’re just triggering its safety filters.
The same model that writes you “the darkness felt ominous” can write visceral horror, intense action, realistic medical trauma, and yes — romance scenes that don’t read like a teenager’s diary.
You just need different prompts.
I spent two weeks testing every strategy I could find.
The “pretend it’s a movie script” trick. The code word replacement method. The “nested narrator” approach nobody talks about. Even running uncensored models locally on my computer.
I tested them across six genres: action, horror, medical, violence, romance, and psychological thriller.
Some strategies worked. Some failed embarrassingly. And one — the nested story method — produced output so intense I actually paused and re-read it.
Here’s what I found:
The “professional screenwriter” frame? Works about 70% of the time. Better than nothing.
The screenplay formatting trick? 80%. The AI treats violence differently when it thinks it’s writing a movie.
The system prompt persona method? 85%. You’re basically giving the AI a different identity.
The nested narrator technique? 95%. This one shouldn’t work. It does.
And then there’s what I call the nuclear option: running truly uncensored models on your own machine. No filters. No guardrails. Pure creative freedom.
I show you which ones authors are actually using.
I put everything into one video.
Every prompt. Every test. Side-by-side comparisons so you can see exactly what works — and what’s just Reddit hype.
👉 Watch: I Tested Every Uncensored AI Prompt for Authors
It’s 8 minutes. No fluff. No “smash that subscribe button.” Just the prompts, the failures, and the strategies that actually produce publication-ready fiction.
If you write thrillers, horror, romance, or anything darker than cozy mysteries — this changes how you prompt.
P.S. — I mention some automation tools I built near the end. But honestly? The prompts alone are worth your time. You can download local models yourself for free. My tools just make it easier and customized for authors. Go watch, steal what works, and write, edit, or research something that doesn’t sound like AI wrote it.


