ChatGPT is going to stop talking about goblins and gremlins as it sheds”nerdy” persona
OpenAI traces ChatGPT's goblin obsession to a "Nerdy" personality training error that spread across its models.
A "Nerdy" personality setting accidentally taught ChatGPT to love goblins.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends
If you’ve been chatting with ChatGPT lately and noticed it dropping oddly specific references to goblins, gremlins, ogres, or trolls, you’re not imagining things. OpenAI has now explained why ChatGPT has developed this strange habit and how it’s getting fixed.
How a “nerdy” quirk became everyone’s problem
OpenAI
The problem quietly started with GPT-5.1, released in November. After that launch, use of the word “goblin” in ChatGPT responses jumped 175%, while “gremlin” rose 52%. The culprit turned out to be one of ChatGPT’s optional personality settings called “Nerdy,” which was designed to make the AI sound playful and intellectually curious.
During training, OpenAI accidentally gave the model unusually high rewards for responses that included creature-based metaphors, and the habit took hold fast.
How did a single personality setting cause so much goblin talk?
OpenAI
Here’s where it gets interesting. Even users who never switched on the Nerdy personality started seeing goblin references pop up in their chats. That’s because AI training isn’t contained to one setting. Once the ChatGPT model was rewarded for that style, the behavior bled into general responses across the board.
OpenAI says the Nerdy personality made up just 2.5% of all ChatGPT responses, yet accounted for 66.7% of all goblin mentions.
So how is OpenAI actually fixing this?
OpenAI
OpenAI retired the Nerdy personality in March with ChatGPT-5.4, which caused goblin references to drop sharply. The company also stripped out the reward signal driving the behavior and filtered training data to reduce references to other magical creatures.
Its coding tool, Codex, however, needed a separate override instruction since it had already begun training before the root cause was identified. Fantasy fans can still unlock goblin mode in Codex manually, if that’s your thing.
OpenAI is also dealing with other personality-related decisions, including putting its previously teased adult mode for verified users on hold indefinitely.

Manisha is a Writer at Digital Trends, covering the latest in tech, science, AI, gaming, and entertainment. As a Computer…
The Digital Trends App Bundle is yours to try for a whole week, free
Recently, we've entered an exciting collaboration with Maple Media, creating a bundle of 17 apps worth having on your phone. From relaxed fun to serious productivity boosts, these apps cover all your bases and provide a fun boost to your phone. Normally, the bundle is $9.99 per month (far lower than the cost of using the apps individually), but for your first 7 days you can get access to the bundle for free. View the full Digital Trends App Bundle for a complete list of the apps, or read on for a summarized take.
Start your free trial
The Galaxy S26 Ultra might not see much of a battery upgrade after all
It looks like it will stay the same as the last five years.

What's happened? This week, China's Quality Certification Center released information about a battery (EB-BS04898ABY) with a maximum capacity of 4,855mAh. That's the same capacity as was previously seen in the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra, and fans have taken this certification to mean the Galaxy S26 Ultra will not see a capacity increase after all.
The Samsung Galaxy Ultra models have had the same battery capacity for the last five years.
The Galaxy Tab S10 Lite is official, and it’ll be here sooner than you think

What's happened? Samsung has officially announced the Galaxy Tab S10 Lite, a budget-friendly alternative to the Galaxy Tab S10. The device has been rumored for months, but this is the first time Samsung has officially acknowledged its existence.
The Galaxy Tab S10 Lite will have a 10.9-inch display and a peak brightness of 600 nits — a bit on the lower side, versus the iPad Pro's maximum brightness of 1,600 nits.
JimMin