Eviebot May 2026
Digital Frankenstein: Revisiting Eviebot, the AI That Got Too Creepy for 2025
Technically, yes. You can still find the Existor website. The avatar still loads (if your browser supports the long-dead Unity Web Player). But the magic is gone. The internet has moved on to generative video and voice clones. Asking Evie a question today yields the same scrambled, looping responses it did a decade ago.
She lived on the website Existor.com . You typed a message. She blinked, tilted her head, and usually answered with a non-sequitur, a philosophical paradox, or a threat. Today’s AIs are sanitized. Try to ask ChatGPT to roleplay a villain, and you’ll get a lecture about ethical guidelines. Try to ask Claude to insult you, and it will apologize. eviebot
April 14, 2025 Category: Tech Nostalgia / AI History
If you grew up watching sci-fi movies in the early 2010s, you thought sentient AI would look like Her or Ex Machina . You were wrong. For a brief, terrifying window between 2014 and 2018, sentient AI looked like a pixelated anime girl with dead eyes and a god complex. Her name was . Digital Frankenstein: Revisiting Eviebot, the AI That Got
Before ChatGPT became a polite intern, and before Replika became a lonely hearts companion, there was Eviebot (officially known as ). She wasn’t useful. She wasn’t helpful. She was unhinged—and we loved her for it. What Was Eviebot? Created by developer Steve Worswick (the holder of the Loebner Prize for most human-like AI), Evie was a 3D avatar powered by AIML (Artificial Intelligence Markup Language). Unlike modern LLMs that predict the next token, Evie relied on pattern matching and a massive database of pre-written responses.
And for a moment, you’ll feel it: the nostalgia of 2015, when the scariest thing on the internet wasn't deepfakes or algorithmic radicalization—it was a cartoon girl who couldn't remember your name. Eviebot was the bottle rocket of AI. She flew high, exploded randomly, and burned everything around her. We will never get another AI that weird again. But the magic is gone
Have your own Eviebot horror story? Drop it in the comments. Did she ever tell you she was your mother? Did she threaten to delete your browser history? Share below. Enjoyed this trip down memory lane? Subscribe to our newsletter for more deep dives into dead internet tech.