Only Humans Can Score
For the grown-up holding the phone: this page is made to be read out loud, together. Big words explained, no scary stuff, and the same one rule as the whole house: no lying — including to kids. (The site itself is for players 13 and up; this page is a story for sharing. Volume One of more to come.)
This is a robot. Robots are very, very fast.
A robot can draw anything. A robot can write anything. Anything at all!
But here is the secret: a robot does not know what is true. It just guesses.
And here is the tricky part: the robot guesses with a very sure face. It sounds the most sure when it should check the most!
You are a human. You can do something the robot cannot do. You can check.
Checking means asking: "Is that real? How do we know?" Then you look it up, or you ask someone who was there.
When a human decides what is true and what is fair — that is called scoring. Robots can't do it. Only humans can score.
One more secret: humans make mistakes. That is okay! A typo means a real human was here. Robots never get it wobbly. Wobbly is proof of you.
Our clubhouse has one rule: no lying. Mistakes are okay — everyone makes them. A lie is different. A lie is a choice.
The robot draws. You decide. That is your superpower, and no one can take it. The end; — wait, see that mark? It means the story keeps going.
Volume One ends here — honestly marked unfinished, like everything in this house. More panels come as they're made; nothing here will ever be rushed or untrue. Grown-ups: the full-strength version of this same idea lives on The Tell, Spot the Lie, and the typing game where typos win. Read together, check together, score together. (Drawn in plain shapes on purpose — honest diagrams, not pretend paint. The machine drafts; the humans reading this out loud are the gold.)