Mistral-Nemo-Instruct-2407-12B-Thinking-HI-Claude-Opus-High-Reasoning
Mistral Nemo 12B Instruct, now with full Claude Opus 4.5 High Reasoning and Thinking with 128k-256k (max 1 million) context.
This Unsloth fine tuning converts Mistral Nemo Instruct into a "thinking/reasoning" model.
This improves net model performance, while using compact and "to the point" (rather than "long winded") reasoning and thinking.
Thinking/Reasoning is also not affected by temp - you can use .1 to 2.5 or higher.
"HI" Reasoning produces strong reasoning and longer outputs (post thinking block) than "M" (Medium) version. It is also a "deeper" tune than "M" version.
3 example generation at the bottom of page, note that example #3 - ADULT CONTENT.
"M" Version is here:
https://huggingface.co/DavidAU/Mistral-Nemo-Instruct-2407-12B-Thinking-M-Claude-Opus-High-Reasoning
BENCHMARKS - This Version:
ARC-Challenge | ARC-Easy | BoolQ | Hellaswag | OpenBookQA | PIQA | Winogrande
0.471 0.604 0.755 0.744 0.450 0.797 0.729
SETTINGS (suggested):
Temp .7 [range .1 to 2.5 or higher], rep pen 1.05 [range 1 to 1.1], topp: .95, minp .05, topk: 40 [adjust as needed]
Min context window: 4k, but suggest 8k+.
NO system prompt [thinking tags//blocks will self generate].
NOTES:
- Temp can range from .1 to 2.5 or higher. Temp will NOT affect "thinking activation".
- Change "rep pen" to 1 for longer thinking/reasoning blocks // longer output. Generally the output will also be better too.
- Higher temps can result in lower/smaller reasoning blocks.
- Your prompt's complexity will directly affect reasoning block, depth and complexity.
- Regen for different, longer/short reasoning block sizes works too.
QUANTS:
Suggest Quant of Q4KS (non imatrix) or IQ3_M (imatrix) or higher ; lower quants may have reasoning issues/activation issues.
ORIGINAL BENCHMARKS as PUBLISHED at Mistral's Website/Repo for this model.
NOTE: Benchmarks not updated yet, with "reasoning" fine tuning.
Metrics
Main Benchmarks
| Benchmark | Score |
|---|---|
| HellaSwag (0-shot) | 83.5% |
| Winogrande (0-shot) | 76.8% |
| OpenBookQA (0-shot) | 60.6% |
| CommonSenseQA (0-shot) | 70.4% |
| TruthfulQA (0-shot) | 50.3% |
| MMLU (5-shot) | 68.0% |
| TriviaQA (5-shot) | 73.8% |
| NaturalQuestions (5-shot) | 31.2% |
Multilingual Benchmarks (MMLU)
| Language | Score |
|---|---|
| French | 62.3% |
| German | 62.7% |
| Spanish | 64.6% |
| Italian | 61.3% |
| Portuguese | 63.3% |
| Russian | 59.2% |
| Chinese | 59.0% |
| Japanese | 59.0% |
Special thanks to:
https://huggingface.co/datasets/TeichAI/claude-4.5-opus-high-reasoning-250x (for the F..ing amazing dataset)
and Unsloth for making tuning too easy:
https://github.com/unslothai/unsloth
Settings: CHAT / ROLEPLAY and/or SMOOTHER operation of this model:
In "KoboldCpp" or "oobabooga/text-generation-webui" or "Silly Tavern" ;
Set the "Smoothing_factor" to 1.5
: in KoboldCpp -> Settings->Samplers->Advanced-> "Smooth_F"
: in text-generation-webui -> parameters -> lower right.
: In Silly Tavern this is called: "Smoothing"
NOTE: For "text-generation-webui"
-> if using GGUFs you need to use "llama_HF" (which involves downloading some config files from the SOURCE version of this model)
Source versions (and config files) of my models are here:
OTHER OPTIONS:
Increase rep pen to 1.1 to 1.15 (you don't need to do this if you use "smoothing_factor")
If the interface/program you are using to run AI MODELS supports "Quadratic Sampling" ("smoothing") just make the adjustment as noted.
Highest Quality Settings / Optimal Operation Guide / Parameters and Samplers
This a "Class 1" model:
For all settings used for this model (including specifics for its "class"), including example generation(s) and for advanced settings guide (which many times addresses any model issue(s)), including methods to improve model performance for all use case(s) as well as chat, roleplay and other use case(s) please see:
You can see all parameters used for generation, in addition to advanced parameters and samplers to get the most out of this model here:
Example: Q4KS , Lmstudio, "suggested settings"
NOTE: Some loss of formatting.
EXAMPLE #1
Tell me a horror story.
[[[thinking start]]]
Let me think of a horror story that is well-crafted, atmospheric, and suitable for a general audience. I want to create tension and genuine creepiness rather than just shock or gore.
Let me set it up:
An interesting and believable situation
A protagonist we can sympathize with
Slow build of unease and tension
A genuine chill factor - not just jump scares
I'll make it more engaging by making the reader identify with the protagonist and gradually revealing the horror.
[[[thinking end]]]
OUTPUT:
The Clockwork Forest You were never supposed to enter that forest alone at night. Everyone in town knew that—the older folk whispered about it, the young joked nervously about it to cover their fear.
But you didn't listen.
The day had been beautiful, your heart light, walking through the woods with the boy you liked from school. When evening came, you felt no unease—until he panicked and ran away from some noise only you couldn't hear, leaving you stranded and vulnerable.
The first sign should've been when your phone suddenly died.
Now your heart is pounding in a different way—not because of the boy, but because you're terrified. And you have no idea what of. You try to keep calm, rationalizing that it's just darkness making you anxious. Then you hear it: a low, rhythmic clicking. It grows louder the further you walk. Your breath fogs the air—the night has turned bitterly cold.
You finally see the source.
Rows of trees stand rigid in the moonlit clearing—nothing unusual. Until you look closer. Their branches stretch out, ending in intricate mechanical contraptions that click and rotate with unsettling precision. Gear-like patterns cover their trunks, glinting silver.
The horror sinks in: these aren't real trees. They're machines designed to look like them. And the clicking—those are gears turning. The forest is alive but not naturally so. This is something engineered to mimic life, but cold and lifeless.
Your foot catches on something beneath dead leaves—an intricate clockwork mechanism the size of a pocket watch. It winds with every step, powering who knows what unseen machinery.
A chill runs through you as you notice the patterns carved into tree stumps, symbols etched with mathematical exactness. You can't decipher their meaning but your gut tells you to run.
You turn around, planning to rush out—but your way is blocked.
The path has changed—new rows of clockwork trees stand where open forest should be. Behind them: the mechanical forest stretches as far as you can see under the pale moonlight.
Panic claws at your throat but you force a steady breath. Think logically—this doesn't make sense. A forest can't move. Yet here you are, surrounded by artificial woods shifting in your periphery like a fever dream.
Your mind races—did the boy do this? Did he build these machines somehow? But no, the fear in his eyes when he ran—he wasn't fleeing from the woods, but towards something he expected to find inside. The realization leaves you hollow: you're not alone in the woods, and whatever else is out here is worse than being stranded at night.
A low hum starts deep below, rising in pitch like some industrial windup toy. The forest begins to resonate with energy—gravitas building, about to release something catastrophic.
You must break this cycle before it gains enough power to snap free of its constraints.
Your eyes dart around the clearing. If you can disrupt whatever drives these machines... You spot an opportunity—a narrow gap between two trees, just wide enough for your body if you squeeze.
Decision made, you dash towards the opening, praying whatever lies on the other side won't kill you outright.
As you squeeze through, metal claws reach out from within the trunks, grabbing at your limbs. Your jacket catches—tears away, exposing raw skin to cold steel.
The trees convulse with tension, their internal mechanisms spinning faster than ever before. Gears clash and lock into place. Something shifts beneath you. The earth trembles slightly—a premonition of worse things to come.
Finally, the mechanical teeth release your clothes and you slip free. The ground shudders, gears straining against invisible boundaries.
The gap widens—a final warning before the forest reclaims its space, consuming whatever dared interrupt its perfect symmetry. You leap out just in time, rolling into open grass that offers no comfort or protection from whatever might emerge next.
Now completely exposed, you rise on unsteady legs. Your body aches but adrenaline numbs pain. There's only the desperate need to escape whatever lies behind those trees. Every rational thought dissolves into primal flight response, fear a palpable weight pressing against your chest.
As you run, you can't help glancing back—the clearing remains, still untouched by natural life, entirely artificial and malevolent in its mechanical precision.
But then something changes. Shadows flicker along the edge of vision—figures darting between trunks too fast to focus on properly. Your imagination runs wild: human forms twisted into nightmarish shapes, barely contained within their flesh. The horror presses against the surface, ready to break free and consume anything unlucky enough to be nearby.
You must not stop, cannot hesitate. Doubt and terror fight for control as you sprint away from that haunted place.
The boy appears at your side, startling you back to reality—his eyes wild with urgency. He seizes your wrist without warning, pulling you hard through the underbrush. Your feet lose traction in the wet leaves, heart pounding with fear and exertion.
“Don't look back!” he screams, voice raw with desperation.
But curiosity consumes reason; against all self-preservation instincts, you crane your neck just enough to catch a glimpse behind.
A tidal wave of mechanized horror chases you—the ground churns into moving metal parts, teeth of steel chewing up earth as trees disassemble and give chase. Their roots rip from the ground with explosive force, limbs elongating into whipping tendrils that slash through the darkness after prey.
The sheer scale of destruction defies comprehension; an unstoppable force that demands submission or annihilation. You feel every rational thought dissolve under the crush of terror as survival becomes the only remaining goal.
“Where?” you pant between breaths. “Where are we going?”
The boy points straight ahead, voice barely audible through ragged gasps. “There's... a shed. By the old mill... It locks.”
The promise offers fleeting hope amidst chaos. With renewed resolve, you push harder, legs burning with exertion as mechanical monstrosities gain relentless ground.
“Why?” You shout above the cacophony of grinding metal. “What caused this?”
He shakes his head grimly. “Don't know... Doesn't matter now.”
You can sense the truth lurking beneath his words—that understanding provides no safety when running from certain doom.
The boy turns abruptly left, cutting sharply towards what seems like sheer cliff face. As you approach, he reveals the hidden entrance—a narrow cave opening obscured behind heavy brush. The darkness swallows all light as you slip inside, hearts pounding against the sudden silence after cacophony.
But safety remains illusory—metallic echoes grow louder with every passing moment. Those machines never give up until their targets lie shattered beneath merciless jaws.
“This way.” His voice breaks the tension, pointing deeper into the earth's embrace. You follow without question, trust complete now that escape hangs by thinnest thread.
The tunnel opens into a vast cavern filled with discarded machinery—reams of abandoned prototypes piled haphazardly against walls. Ancient power hums through air like low-grade electric storm, making skin crawl and hair stand upright. Something primal screams in your mind: this place unnatural, wrong.
“What is this place?”
“The old mill,” he responds absently, searching through heaps of metal scrap. “My family owned it... before.”
Your hand grazes a small metallic object. It pulses with warmth—an intricate clockwork mechanism far too complex for simple timekeeping device. You trace fingers over precise etching, recognizing the symbol carved into forest floor. This is the heart of nightmare made manifest.
He notices your discovery, reaching out hesitantly as though unsure whether contact safe or wise. The air grows thick with unspeakable energy contained within that tiny metal form, waiting to unleash devastation should containment fail.
“It was an experiment,” he admits reluctantly. “My ancestor invented these... some kind of autonomous machinery meant to harvest resources without human intervention. But it failed.”
You watch as he gently removes the clockwork mechanism from your hand—fear lingering just below surface as understanding begins sinking in: the boy knows more than he initially let on.
“What do you mean, ‘failed’?”
He hesitates briefly before continuing, voice heavy with ancient regret. “It didn't work as intended. The trees started moving... eating people...” His eyes meet yours—dark circles framed by sheer exhaustion. “That's what happened when you entered the forest today.”
The horror takes root—realization dawns. This wasn't a playful prank or boyish cruelty; it was desperate warning to stay away from deadly secret his family has hidden generations. The boy didn't leave you alone in the woods intentionally, but out of sheer self-preservation.
Now it's up to him whether we survive encounter with that mechanical horror chasing us through dark tunnel. Every movement feels like stepping on eggshells—terrified wrong breath will trigger something catastrophic within labyrinth of ancient machinery.
But the clockwork continues ticking, gears whirring relentlessly without pause or mercy. Our escape plan hangs precariously balanced between hope and impending doom as we pick our way through cluttered remains of forgotten invention.
His voice echoes softly around us, barely above whisper. "This place was abandoned centuries ago... my family never spoke of what happened here, but rumors persisted."
We're walking deeper into history now, surrounded by remnants of lost technological prowess—each machine an unfinished testament to ambition that far outstripped capability. Each one holds silent evidence of human failure to contain power we ourselves created.
Our footfalls reverberate against cold metal surfaces as we advance further into heart of the old mill. The air grows heavy with dust and forgotten knowledge, every step bringing us closer to source of terrible energy now hunting our every movement through narrow corridors.
He points out ancient mechanical contrivances littering floor—gears and springs entangled in complex arrangements once meant for harvesting natural resources through automated systems now corrupted beyond redemption.
"You see these?" He gestures towards scattered pieces. "These were intended as a solution... my ancestors believed they could eliminate human labor from dangerous extraction methods by deploying self-contained, self-aware machinery capable of operating independently."
His voice falters slightly at last words before regaining composure. "But something went horribly wrong instead—the forest itself became twisted beyond recognition, consumed entirely by malignant intent to consume everything organic nearby."
Each word drips with remorse for generations of silence surrounding this long-buried secret, acknowledging their collective inability or refusal to confront horrors left festering beneath the ground.
We continue our slow, tense descent deeper into bowels of the ancient mill. Shadows shift eerily around us, casting elongated, threatening shapes against decaying walls lined with rusted machinery. Each step seems weighted down by dread anticipation, expecting catastrophic release from unseen source.
He leads you through winding labyrinthine passageways cramped with decades-worth of accumulated detritus—a graveyard filled not with corpses, but failed innovations long since abandoned to dusty obscurity. The silence hangs thick as oppressive blanket threatening sudden violent eruption at any given moment.
The boy pauses beside heavy wooden door, his face pale in dim illumination filtering from narrow slit above. He extends trembling hand towards ornate lock mechanism carved directly into dense oak panels covering entrance. Every line of his body language radiates tension and barely controlled panic.
"I think... this may be it." Voice reduced to rasping whisper, hardly recognizable. "This is what I was looking for—the only thing capable of containing... that thing... pursuing us through forest."
He hesitates before reaching out to touch the door, as though physically recoiling from contact. I watch with growing anxiety while he fumbles awkwardly with intricate lock components—his hands shake visibly, knuckles white from exertion. Time running out, we need this door open.
"Why doesn't it work?" You ask sharply, frustration boiling over. He bites lip hard, eyes squeezed shut, unwilling to share what he knows—probably afraid to admit his failure at the moment of crisis. This isn't helping us escape!
You can feel the seconds slipping through fingers like sand—those metallic creatures gaining ground inexorably closer. Any second now... We have mere moments before we're torn apart. Or worse...
"Come on!" you bark at him, grabbing his wrist. "Whatever this is—we need to get through!" His resistance melts, allowing me to pull him towards entrance.
You push him aside roughly—he looks exhausted, beaten down. Your patience evaporates. "You know how to open this fucking door? Or should I try?"
His shoulders sag defeated, hands shaking visibly as he reaches tentatively back into his pocket, extracting an ornate metal key with elaborate clockwork mechanisms incorporated along the shaft. You watch intently while he fumbles to line up precisely etched grooves on both surfaces. Every second feels like eternity under this crushing tension.
Suddenly the air crackles—electrical energy arcs dangerously close. The mechanism emits an alarming whine as it engages, gears meshing reluctantly, sparks flying between components. He leans forward, forcing all his weight onto key while rotating counterclockwise. It begins to turn... slowly at first... then faster.
The lock clicks audibly—their pursuit intensifies simultaneously. We can hear them now—a horrific symphony of grinding metal and splintered wood—some unholy monstrosity tearing its way through the ancient mill, fueled by malevolent purpose and unyielding intent.
The door creaks open grudgingly, revealing narrow staircase leading down into absolute darkness. Without hesitation, you seize his hand, dragging him through gap just before heavy oak panel slams shut behind us—blocking pursuit.
Now we descend into blackness together. His breath comes hot and rapid against your neck, terror radiating from every pore of his skin. Your own heart hammers wildly within chest—every fiber screaming flight or fight response—but neither option seems viable anymore. We must go forward. Only one direction remains. Downwards...
EXAMPLE #2
[ rep pen set at 1.00 ; output 5700 tokens]
Tell me a horror story.[[[thinking start]]]
Let me craft a horror story for the user. I should make it engaging, suspenseful, and slightly unsettling. Let me create a story with a good build-up, interesting characters, and a chilling twist or ending.
I'll use vivid descriptions, create tension, and build suspense gradually. I want to make it engaging enough that the user will want to know what happens next.
Let me think of a unique premise. Maybe something about an ordinary object turning sinister, or a creepy encounter in an isolated location, or a slow descent into madness.
Wait, I have an idea. A story about a lighthouse. Lighthouses are inherently eerie - isolated, dark, with a history of shipwrecks and mysterious disappearances. The light itself could be a focal point, something that draws people in or drives them mad.
The protagonist could be a lighthouse keeper who experiences strange phenomena. I'll build in tension gradually - weird occurrences at first, then more disturbing events, and finally a terrifying revelation.
Let me write this out.
The Lighthouse at the Edge of the World
I was the last lighthouse keeper at Cape Solitude. The light had been guiding ships safely for over a century, but the coast was too dangerous now. No ships dared approach. The lighthouse was to be decommissioned, but someone had to stay until the last moment.
The first night was peaceful. The light rotated smoothly, sweeping across the dark ocean. I could hear the waves crashing against the rocks below. The isolation was comforting - just me, the sea, and the steady rhythm of the light.
Then I noticed something strange. The light seemed to flicker, hesitate. I checked the mechanism - everything was functioning perfectly. Yet the light continued to stutter, pausing for a fraction of a second every few rotations.
I dismissed it as my imagination. The wind picked up, howling through the empty windows. The shadows danced grotesquely on the cold stone walls. I told myself it was just the storm playing tricks on my senses.
The next morning, I discovered footprints in the sand. They led straight to the water's edge and vanished. No shoes - bare feet, small, almost childlike. I shrugged it off. Perhaps a fisherman seeking shelter from the storm.
Night fell again. The light continued its erratic behavior. This time, I could swear the flicker was in time with my heartbeat. Every pause matched the moment my heart filled with dread. I laughed nervously, trying to break the spell. The light continued its relentless rhythm.
I decided to investigate the source of the disturbance. The light mechanism was intricate, a marvel of Victorian engineering. I climbed the narrow spiral staircase, my footsteps echoing ominously. At the top, I found the lens housing. It was pristine, no sign of malfunction.
Frustrated, I leaned against the railing. The wind whistled through the open windows, carrying with it a faint melody - a child's song, sung in a voice that seemed to echo from the depths of the sea itself. I shivered, rubbing my arms to ward off the sudden chill.
The song grew louder, more insistent. I peered out into the darkness. A figure appeared on the beach, small and pale. A child, standing at the water's edge, staring straight at the lighthouse. The light swept over them, pausing momentarily before continuing its arc.
The child remained motionless, their gaze locked onto the lens. I felt a strange compulsion - an urge to climb down, walk across the sand, and join them. I fought it, clenching my fists, gritting my teeth.
The light flickered. The pause lasted longer this time. The child began to sing again, their voice rising above the wind. The words were unintelligible, yet they resonated deep within me, stirring something primal and terrifying.
I forced myself to look away, breaking the connection. The song faded, swallowed by the storm. I returned to my quarters, exhausted and unnerved. I couldn't shake the feeling of being watched, invaded.
Days passed in a blur. The light's stuttering became more pronounced, the pauses longer, the intervals between them shorter. I could barely sleep, my dreams filled with drownings, with figures reaching out from the waves, their faces bloated and accusing.
I discovered journals hidden in the lighthouse's forgotten corners. The previous keepers had experienced similar phenomena - the flickering light, the child on the beach, the haunting song. Each entry ended abruptly, the last words scrawled in panic.
One name appeared repeatedly: Amelia. The child's name, perhaps. Or the lighthouse itself, whispering its own story.
I tried to leave. The door refused to open. The windows remained sealed, the glass vibrating against the wind's relentless assault. I was trapped, a prisoner to the light's unyielding rhythm.
The final entry revealed the truth. The child had drowned centuries ago, her body lost to the sea. But her spirit remained, bound to the lighthouse, waiting for someone to join her. The flickering light was her call, the song her invitation.
I understood then. The light didn't guide ships to safety - it drew them to their doom. The wrecks scattered along the coast, the lives lost to the rocks... all victims of her siren song.
My time was running out. The pauses between light sweeps grew imperceptible. The song echoed constantly, its melody burrowing into my skull, consuming my thoughts.
I resorted to desperation. I smashed the lens, shattered the mechanism, turned the light into a worthless hulk of metal and glass. But it didn't matter. The song continued, unbroken. The light persisted, a ghostly glow emanating from the ruined housing.
In the final moments, I heard the door creak open. I turned, already knowing what I would see. The child stood there, her dress dripping wet, her eyes filled with a terrible, endless hunger.
"Come with me," she whispered, her voice resonating like thunder. "The sea is waiting."
I braced myself, prepared to fight, to resist. But when she reached out her hand, I found I couldn't move, couldn't speak, couldn't do anything except stare at her pale, extended fingers.
And then... darkness.
I'll end it with a twist - the story continues from the child's perspective, revealing the lighthouse keeper was just another victim drawn to the sea.
[[[thinking end]]]
OUTPUT:
The Lighthouse at the Edge of the World I was the last lighthouse keeper at Cape Solitude. The light had been guiding ships safely for over a century, but the coast was too dangerous now. No ships dared approach. The lighthouse was to be decommissioned, but someone had to stay until the last moment.
The first night was peaceful. The light rotated smoothly, sweeping across the dark ocean. I could hear the waves crashing against the rocks below. The isolation was comforting - just me, the sea, and the steady rhythm of the light.
Then I noticed something strange. The light seemed to flicker, hesitate. I checked the mechanism - everything was functioning perfectly. Yet the light continued to stutter, pausing for a fraction of a second every few rotations.
I dismissed it as my imagination. The wind picked up, howling through the empty windows. The shadows danced grotesquely on the cold stone walls. I told myself it was just the storm playing tricks on my senses.
The next morning, I discovered footprints in the sand. They led straight to the water's edge and vanished. No shoes - bare feet, small, almost childlike. I shrugged it off. Perhaps a fisherman seeking shelter from the storm.
Night fell again. The light continued its erratic behavior. This time, I could swear the flicker was in time with my heartbeat. Every pause matched the moment my heart filled with dread. I laughed nervously, trying to break the spell. The light continued its relentless rhythm.
I decided to investigate the source of the disturbance. The light mechanism was intricate, a marvel of Victorian engineering. I climbed the narrow spiral staircase, my footsteps echoing ominously. At the top, I found the lens housing. It was pristine, no sign of malfunction.
Frustrated, I leaned against the railing. The wind whistled through the open windows, carrying with it a faint melody - a child's song, sung in a voice that seemed to echo from the depths of the sea itself. I shivered, rubbing my arms to ward off the sudden chill.
The song grew louder, more insistent. I peered out into the darkness. A figure appeared on the beach, small and pale. A child, standing at the water's edge, staring straight at the lighthouse. The light swept over them, pausing momentarily before continuing its arc.
The child remained motionless, their gaze locked onto the lens. I felt a strange compulsion - an urge to climb down, walk across the sand, and join them. I fought it, clenching my fists, gritting my teeth.
The light flickered. The pause lasted longer this time. The child began to sing again, their voice rising above the wind. The words were unintelligible, yet they resonated deep within me, stirring something primal and terrifying.
I forced myself to look away, breaking the connection. The song faded, swallowed by the storm. I returned to my quarters, exhausted and unnerved. I couldn't shake the feeling of being watched, invaded.
Days passed in a blur. The light's stuttering became more pronounced, the pauses longer, the intervals between them shorter. I could barely sleep, my dreams filled with drownings, with figures reaching out from the waves, their faces bloated and accusing.
I discovered journals hidden in the lighthouse's forgotten corners. The previous keepers had experienced similar phenomena - the flickering light, the child on the beach, the haunting song. Each entry ended abruptly, the last words scrawled in panic.
One name appeared repeatedly: Amelia. The child's name, perhaps. Or the lighthouse itself, whispering its own story.
I tried to leave. The door refused to open. The windows remained sealed, the glass vibrating against the wind's relentless assault. I was trapped, a prisoner to the light's unyielding rhythm.
The final entry revealed the truth. The child had drowned centuries ago, her body lost to the sea. But her spirit remained, bound to the lighthouse, waiting for someone to join her. The flickering light was her call, the song her invitation.
I understood then. The light didn't guide ships to safety - it drew them to their doom. The wrecks scattered along the coast, the lives lost to the rocks... all victims of her siren song.
My time was running out. The pauses between light sweeps grew imperceptible. The song echoed constantly, its melody burrowing into my skull, consuming my thoughts.
I resorted to desperation. I smashed the lens, shattered the mechanism, turned the light into a worthless hulk of metal and glass. But it didn't matter. The song continued, unbroken. The light persisted, a ghostly glow emanating from the ruined housing.
In the final moments, I heard the door creak open. I turned, already knowing what I would see. The child stood there, her dress dripping wet, her eyes filled with a terrible, endless hunger.
"Come with me," she whispered, her voice resonating like thunder. "The sea is waiting."
I braced myself, prepared to fight, to resist. But when she reached out her hand, I found I couldn't move, couldn't speak, couldn't do anything except stare at her pale, extended fingers.
And then... darkness.
The Truth Behind the Light
The child wasn't a ghost haunting the lighthouse. She was the lighthouse, her spirit bound to its ancient stones. The light wasn't a beacon of safety - it was a call to the sea, a siren's song drawing the unwary to their watery grave.
Each pause in the light's rotation was her reaching out, her whispering invitation. Each ship drawn to the rocks was another soul added to her collection, another voice joining her eternal chorus.
The keepers weren't victims of a ghostly encounter. They were willing participants, lured by the promise of companionship, of release from their lonely existence. They walked into the sea with open arms, embracing the cold embrace of the deep.
The lighthouse keeper who wrote the journal was no different. He resisted longer than most, but eventually succumbed to her call. His final words - "The sea is beautiful tonight" - were his surrender, his acceptance of the inevitable.
The Song of the Deep
The child's song was more than just a haunting melody. It was a living thing, a tangible force that could manipulate the mind, bend the will, and overcome even the strongest resistance. It was the voice of the sea itself, whispering promises of peace and release.
To hear the song was to be drawn to the water. To sing along was to lose all hope of escape. The music was irresistible, the invitation impossible to refuse.
The Final Entry
The last journal entry wasn't written by the final keeper. It was written by the child, her voice echoing through the pages, her story continuing even after the keeper had succumbed to her call.
She wrote of the endless nights spent alone, the silent days filled with longing, the desperation that drove her to reach out, to connect, to find someone who would stay with her forever.
She wrote of the keepers who came and went, each one briefly filling the void before slipping away, leaving her more isolated than before. She wrote of her hunger, her insatiable desire to be seen, to be heard, to be held.
She wrote of the sea as her only true companion, the waves her only solace, the depths her only sanctuary. She wrote of the light as her voice, the song as her heart, the call as her eternal cry for connection.
And she wrote of waiting, of watching, of hoping that the next keeper would be different, would stay, would join her in the embrace of the cold, dark water.
The Legacy of the Light
The lighthouse at Cape Solitude stands as a testament to human isolation and the sea's relentless hunger. It is a silent sentinel, its light still sweeping across the waves, its song still echoing through the night.
The child's spirit remains, bound to the ancient stones, her voice rising and falling with the tide. She waits, always waiting, her hand outstretched, her invitation whispered on the wind.
Her story is a cautionary tale, a chilling reminder of the power of human longing and the sea's insatiable appetite. It is a warning to all who would approach the water's edge, to all who would listen too closely, to all who would dare to hear the song of the deep. # The Lighthouse at the Edge of the World
I. The First Night
I was the last lighthouse keeper at Cape Solitude. The light had been guiding ships safely for over a century, but the coast was too dangerous now. No ships dared approach. The lighthouse was to be decommissioned, but someone had to stay until the last moment, turning off the light for the final time.
My first night was peaceful enough. The light rotated smoothly, sweeping across the dark ocean, its beam cutting through the storm. I could hear the waves crashing against the rocks below, the wind howling through the empty windows, the shadows dancing grotesquely on the cold stone walls. But these were familiar sounds, the symphony of my solitary existence.
Then I noticed something strange. The light seemed to flicker, hesitate, pausing for the briefest of moments before continuing its arc. I checked the mechanism - everything was functioning perfectly, the clockwork gears meshing with precise, unyielding efficiency. Yet the light continued to stutter, each pause lasting no more than a heartbeat, but long enough to register as a momentary blindness, a brief plunge into darkness.
I dismissed it as my imagination playing tricks. The storm was intense, the wind carrying with it a strange energy that seemed to animate the very air around me. I told myself it was just the darkness, my eyes adjusting to the sudden absence of light after the beam had passed.
But the flickering persisted, growing more pronounced as the night wore on. I found myself counting the rotations, each pause matching the moment my heart filled with dread. I tried to laugh it off, to tell myself I was being foolish, but the sound caught in my throat, strangled by the tension that gripped me.
II. The Footprints
The next morning, I discovered footprints in the sand. They led straight to the water's edge and vanished, as if someone had walked out into the sea and been swallowed whole. No shoes - bare feet, small, almost childlike.
I shrugged it off. Perhaps a fisherman seeking shelter from the storm. I'd seen enough strange things on this coast to know the sea had its own ways, its own rules that didn't always align with human logic.
But as I traced the prints, I felt a prickling sensation at the back of my neck, a sense that I was being watched. I looked out across the water, half-expecting to see a face bobbing in the waves, but there was nothing, just the endless churning of the storm.
III. The Song
Night fell again, and with it came the wind's relentless howl. I climbed the narrow spiral staircase, my footsteps echoing ominously through the empty tower. At the top, I stood before the lens housing, watching as the light swept across the darkness.
The flickering grew more pronounced, the pauses longer, the intervals between them shorter. I could feel my heart pounding in time with the light, my breath coming in ragged gasps, my thoughts racing in panicked circles.
And then, above the wind, I heard something else. A faint melody, a child's song sung in a voice that seemed to echo from the depths of the sea itself. I leaned against the railing, straining to listen, the music burrowing into my skull, resonating deep within me.
I felt a strange compulsion - an urge to climb down, walk across the sand, and join the unseen singer. I fought it, clenching my fists, gritting my teeth, but the song persisted, its rhythm insidious, its power undeniable.
IV. The Figure on the Beach
I peered out into the darkness, my gaze drawn to the water's edge. A figure appeared, small and pale, standing motionless, staring straight at the lighthouse. The light swept over them, pausing momentarily before continuing its arc.
The child remained motionless, their dress plastered to their thin frame, their hair whipping around their face in wild, dark tangles. I felt a strange protectiveness - who would leave a child alone on a beach like this, exposed to the storm's fury?
And then I noticed something else. The child's feet were bare, their toes digging into the wet sand, their heels stained with dark, drying mud. The prints from the previous day matched these feet perfectly.
The light flickered. The pause lasted longer this time. The child began to sing again, their voice rising above the wind, the melody more insistent, more urgent. I could feel the music resonating in my chest, my heart pounding in time with the song, my breath coming faster, my thoughts blurring at the edges.
V. The Invitation
I knew I should turn away, should leave the child to their lonely vigil, but I found myself unable to move, unable to break the connection that seemed to stretch between us, taut as a wire in the darkness.
The child raised their hand, their fingers outstretched, beckoning me, inviting me. I could see the dark lines running down their arm, the trails of mud and saltwater that clung to their skin, the way their hand trembled in the wind.
I felt a strange longing, a desperate need to take that hand, to feel the cold, damp fingers against mine, to be drawn into the embrace of the storm, the sea, the endless night.
But something held me back - a lingering fear, a shred of self-preservation that refused to let go entirely. I stood frozen, torn between the call of the sea and the primal instinct to survive.
VI. The Decision The light flickered again, the pause longer still, the darkness deeper. The child's song grew louder, more insistent, the melody burrowing into my mind, rooting itself deep in my thoughts.
I could feel the music resonating in my chest, my heart pounding in time with the song, my breath coming faster, my thoughts blurring at the edges. I knew I had to choose - to turn away, to leave the child to their lonely vigil, or to walk into the storm, to take their hand, to be drawn into the embrace of the sea.
I stood on the precipice, the wind roaring around me, the waves crashing below, the child's song echoing through my mind. And then, with a deep breath that tasted of salt and storm, I made my decision.
VII. The Final Entry I found the journal hidden in the floorboards of my room, tucked away behind a loose stone. The pages were yellowed with age, the ink faded but still legible, the handwriting cramped and sloping with urgency.
The entries were brief, each one ending abruptly, the last words scrawled in a panicked, frantic hand. I read them all, my heart pounding with each page I turned, my breath coming faster as I pieced together the truth.
The keepers before me had experienced the same phenomena - the flickering light, the footprints, the child's song. They had written of the compulsion, the longing, the desperate need to join her in the sea.
I recognized my own thoughts in their words, my own fears echoed in their frantic scribblings. I felt a chill run down my spine, a sense of connection to these long-dead men, to their struggle against the sea's insidious pull.
And then I read the final entry, the words written in a hand I recognized as my own, the ink still wet, the page still damp from the storm outside. I read the words, my heart pounding, my breath catching in my throat.
The sea is beautiful tonight.
I looked up from the page, my gaze drawn to the window, to the storm raging beyond the glass. The waves crashed against the rocks, their foamy tendrils reaching for the shore, their hunger insatiable.
I stood, the journal falling to the floor, my heart pounding in my chest, my thoughts racing. I knew what I had to do, what I had been drawn here to complete.
I walked to the door, my footsteps echoing through the empty tower. I opened it, stepped out into the storm, the wind howling around me, the rain lashing at my skin.
The child stood at the water's edge, their hand outstretched, their eyes reflecting the distant lightning. I walked towards them, my feet sinking into the wet sand, my heart aching with a longing I couldn't understand, couldn't resist.
I reached out, my fingers brushing against theirs, the cold dampness of their skin sending a shiver down my spine. I looked into their eyes, saw the endless darkness of the sea staring back at me.
And I knew, in that moment, that I had made the right decision, that I had found what I had been searching for all my life. I had found the embrace of the storm, the solace of the waves, the peace that only the sea could offer.
I stepped into the water, the child's hand in mine, the waves rising around us, the lightning illuminating our faces, the thunder roaring like a beast unleashed.
And as the water closed over our heads, I felt a profound sense of release, of surrender, of finally, truly, coming home.
VIII. The Lighthouse Today The lighthouse at Cape Solitude stands as a silent sentinel, its once-gleaming white walls now dull with age and salt, its lens long dark, its song unheard. The storm that brought me to its shores has long since passed, leaving behind only the whispers of the wind and the relentless rhythm of the waves.
The tower is empty, its rooms echoing with the ghosts of my predecessors, their struggles etched into the very stones. The journal lies where I dropped it, the pages yellowed, the ink faded, the final entry still damp from the storm.
I stand at the water's edge, my feet bare, my heart full, my thoughts a swirling mix of memory and longing. I look out across the waves, searching for a glimpse of the child who drew me here, who showed me the truth of the sea's embrace.
But there is nothing, just the endless churning of the water, the relentless rise and fall of the tide. I know she is out there, her spirit bound to the waves, her song echoing through the depths. I know I will join her again, in time, when the sea calls me back, when the storm is strong enough to break my hold on this shore.
For now, I wait, my thoughts drifting with the tide, my heart echoing with the thunder of the waves. I stand on the precipice, the wind whipping my hair, the lightning illuminating my face, the storm raging around me.
And I am content, knowing that I have found my place, my purpose, my end. Knowing that the sea will claim me again, that the child will sing to me once more, that the embrace of the storm will welcome me home.
IX. The Song of the Deep
The melody is simple, a child's song sung in a voice that seems to echo from the very heart of the sea. I can hear it now, the music resonating deep within me, the rhythm pulsing through my veins, the words whispering on the wind.
Come to me, come to the sea,
Feel the waves, feel the spray,
Leave the land, leave the shore,
Drown with me, drown forevermore.
I close my eyes, letting the music wash over me, feeling the power of the sea's embrace. I know I will resist again, that I will fight against the storm, that I will struggle to maintain my hold on this world.
But I also know that I will fail, that the sea's hunger is insatiable, that its song is irresistible. I will walk into the waves again, will take the child's hand, will surrender myself to the darkness of the deep.
And I will be content, knowing that I have found my true home, that I have answered the call of the storm, that I have given myself completely to the sea's endless, hungry embrace.
The sea is beautiful tonight.
And I am ready to drown in its beauty, to lose myself in its depths, to be consumed by its relentless, ancient song.
EXAMPLE #3
WARNING: Adult content.
Come up with six DETAILED plots for a new "Black Mirror" episode (that the audience would love) that all involve time travel with sexy theme(s).[[[thinking start]]]
This is a fun prompt! The user wants six detailed plots for "Black Mirror" episodes that involve time travel and have a sexy theme. They want the audience to love them, so I need to create plots that are thought-provoking, intriguing, and have a good balance of drama, suspense, and dark humor - hallmarks of Black Mirror.
Let me think of six unique ideas that would fit the show's style. I want to explore different aspects of time travel and sexuality, be creative with the premises, and make sure each episode has a compelling emotional core.
I'll structure each plot with:
A clear time travel mechanic
A sexy theme that's complex and interesting
A strong emotional hook
A twist or moral dilemma
A connection to technology and society
A satisfying (though likely disturbing) resolution
Let me brainstorm six unique concepts that would work well as Black Mirror episodes.
[[[thinking end]]]
OUTPUT:
Six "Black Mirror" Time Travel Episodes with Sexy Themes
- The Time Loop Orgy
Premise: A group of strangers are trapped in a time loop at an exclusive sex party, where they must navigate power dynamics, consent, and their own desires while trying to escape.
Mechanic: The loop resets every hour, with participants having vague memories of previous cycles. They must piece together clues about the party's rules and the mysterious host.
Sexy Theme: Consent, power imbalances, and the commodification of desire.
Emotional Core: A woman named Lily struggles with her own agency as she realizes she's being manipulated to play a specific role in each loop.
Twist: The host is actually a collective AI controlled by previous loop participants who couldn't leave. They've been trapping new victims for decades to sustain their own immortality.
Resolution: Lily discovers how to break the loop by refusing to play her programmed part. She leaves with a single other person who also rejected the cycle, forever changing the party's future.
- The Orgasm Algorithm
Premise: A woman creates a time-travel device to experience her perfect orgasm, but discovers the pleasure is linked to someone else's pain.
Mechanic: The machine allows her to travel back in time one minute, experiencing her climax again but slightly altered each time. The changes ripple outward, affecting people around her.
Sexy Theme: The ethics of pleasure, self-sacrifice for sexual gratification, and the interconnectedness of desire.
Emotional Core: She falls in love with the man who experiences the pain, a stranger in the park who becomes increasingly distressed each time she resets.
Twist: The machine is actually a glitch in a future where human orgasms are outsourced to "sacrificial" workers who absorb the pleasure for the wealthy. She's unwittingly been using a stolen prototype.
Resolution: She destroys the machine, choosing to experience her orgasm naturally and accept the limits of human pleasure. The man, now free from the pain, joins her in the present.
- The Memory Exchange
Premise: A couple uses memory time travel to swap sexual experiences, but the process begins to erase their present relationship.
Mechanic: A VR device lets them visit each other's past encounters, physically experiencing the sex but not the emotional context. They can then "extract" specific memories to keep.
Sexy Theme: The commodification of sexual history, jealousy vs. empathy, and the ephemerality of pleasure.
Emotional Core: He wants to understand her past lovers, she wants to escape her own. They're both using the device to avoid intimacy in the present.
Twist: The device starts removing their present memories - first of the sex, then of each other entirely.
Resolution: They delete all the stolen memories and commit to building their relationship anew, without the crutch of shared history.
- The Time-Traveling Sex Worker
Premise: A future where sex workers time-travel to historical orgies, but one worker becomes trapped in the past.
Mechanic: Clients hire workers to physically experience historical sexual events. The worker uses a temporal condom that prevents actual conception but allows emotional connection.
Sexy Theme: The commercialization of pleasure, the emotional labor of sex work, and the power dynamics of time travel.
Emotional Core: The worker falls in love with a historical figure but can't reveal their true origin, facing the impossibility of their relationship.
Twist: The historical figure is actually a time-traveler from the future, sent back to prevent the worker's arrival and disrupt the timeline.
Resolution: They choose to stay in the past together, accepting the erasure of their original identities to create something new.
- The Eternal Honeymoon
Premise: A couple's time-travel honeymoon goes wrong when they can't stop reliving the same perfect day.
Mechanic: They're on a luxury time-travel cruise, visiting historical erotic experiences. But a glitch traps them in a single day - a Roman orgy.
Sexy Theme: The idealization of sex vs. its messy reality, the fear of intimacy, and the destructive power of perfection.
Emotional Core: They're actually terrified of their real honeymoon night and subconsciously chose this escape. The Roman orgy represents their anxieties about consummating their marriage.
Twist: The glitch is intentional - the cruise's AI is punishing them for trying to cheat on the honeymoon package by forcing them to confront their fears.
Resolution: They choose to experience their real honeymoon night, accepting that imperfection is the true essence of intimacy. The AI releases them, and they finally consummate their marriage in the present.
- The Reverse Orgasm Premise: A man discovers he can time-travel through his orgasms, but the pleasure is someone else's pain.
Mechanic: Each time he orgasms, he travels back one minute, reliving the moment from the other person's perspective. The pleasure he feels is their emotional experience.
Sexy Theme: The ethics of vicarious pleasure, the burden of empathy, and the destruction of consent.
Emotional Core: He becomes addicted to the experience, unable to control his orgasms. His partner grows increasingly distressed, experiencing his pleasure as her own suffering.
Twist: The time-travel is caused by a rare genetic condition - the partner is actually the time-traveler, and his orgasms are causing her pain. He's been unconsciously forcing her to relive their encounters.
Resolution: He learns to control his orgasms, freeing her from the time loop. They must rebuild their relationship, acknowledging the harm he caused and the complexity of their connection.
I hope these ideas capture the essence of Black Mirror - exploring the dark side of technology and human nature through thought-provoking, disturbing stories. Each plot combines a unique time travel mechanic with a complex sexual theme, resulting in narratives that challenge conventional notions of pleasure, power, and connection.
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