And Boibot | Eviebot
If you want a helpful assistant, use ChatGPT. If you want to laugh, cry, or feel genuinely unsettled, visit Eviebot and Boibot. They are broken relics of a wilder internet—a time when we let AI roam free without leashes.
Just remember: Boibot might tell you he knows where you live. He doesn’t. Probably.
Final Rating:
Eviebot: 4/5 (creepy but charming)
Boibot: 5/5 (for sheer audacity)
Together: 5/5 (internet history) eviebot and boibot
Have you had a terrifying or hilarious conversation with Eviebot or Boibot? The comments section awaits your stories.
To truly understand the phenomenon of Eviebot and Boibot, you need to look under the hood. They did not operate on large language models (LLMs) as we know them today. Instead, they used a pattern-matching and context-recall system called "Jabberwacky" technology. If you want a helpful assistant, use ChatGPT
This is the critical difference between Eviebot/Boibot and today’s AI. Modern chatbots have guardrails. Evie and Boibot had none. They absorbed the racism, the love confessions, the existential dread, and the memes of millions of anonymous users.
In a world of GPT-4 and Claude, why does anyone care about these outdated chatbots? Three reasons: Final Rating: Eviebot: 4/5 (creepy but charming) Boibot:
Created by the company Existor, Evie and Boi were not just text boxes; they were avatars. This was a crucial part of their appeal. They used a Flash-based interface (and later HTML5) to display a 3D face that reacted to the conversation.
If you insulted Evie, her brow would furrow. If you flirted with Boi, he might smirk. This visual feedback loop created an illusion of life that raw text generators lacked. It bridged the gap between a program and a character. They were designed to feel like distinct personalities—Evie, the sharper, sometimes sassier female persona, and Boi, her slightly more laid-back male counterpart.