How can I make ChatGPT sound more human?

I’ve been using ChatGPT for various projects, but the responses sometimes feel robotic or unnatural. I want to improve conversations to make them sound more like a real person wrote them. Does anyone have advice or tips for humanizing ChatGPT responses? I’d really appreciate suggestions or examples that have worked for others.

Chasing That ‘Human-esque’ Text Vibe? Here’s What Actually Worked For Me


If You’re Fed Up With Busted AI Text Detectors, Read This

So, true story: I went down a rabbit hole on Reddit because I was this close to scrapping my content project—AI detectors kept flagging my stuff, sometimes even when it was, like, 95% “human.” It was a mess. But then I found a bunch of people talking about a strategy that actually made a difference for them.
Spoiler: it involves two steps and—yes—one of those tools everyone’s side-eying right now.


What’s the Deal? Two-Stop Shop for More “Human” AI Text

Some users were raving about this “Clever AI Humanizer” thing here: https://aihumanizer.net/. But, before you just dump your usual bland bot output into it, you gotta generate your draft using a specific custom GPT on the ChatGPT platform.

Let me just say: it matters. The version you get out of that ChatGPT group—hell, even before you hit the humanizer—reads way less “AI-in-a-hurry.” Then you throw it into the second tool, and I’m seeing legit 20–30% higher “human score” (which, if you’re always getting the “did a robot write this?” flag, is wild).


Wanna See It In Action? Watch This Reel

Someone even did a walkthrough here for free:



My Clumsy Process: Step by Step

  1. Fire up the “GPT Humanizer” at ChatGPT’s custom GPT here.
  2. Write whatever you plan to submit/post/article/essay/etc.
  3. Let that bot do its smarts for low AI patterns.
  4. Take that output and shoot it over to https://aihumanizer.net/.
  5. This second tool “polishes” it up and—at least according to all the detector dashboards I’ve tried—ramps the “human” rating up. Not magic, but dang close.

Receipts or It Didn’t Happen: Check These Scores

Look, I’m not about to post “trust me bro” numbers. So here’s what came out when I tested with two of the big AI detectors:


ZeroGPT Checker


GPTZero’s Turn


TL;DR

People keep asking (and griping): “Can you really beat those new AI detectors these days?” Not always, but this “two-tool tango” will at least give you a shot. The combo of the custom GPT group + Clever AI Humanizer takes that “bot stench” down, and those detector scores don’t lie. Works for assignments, blog stuff, whatever. Not bulletproof, but, finally, something that stumps the bots.

13 Likes

Alright, so @mikeappsreviewer dropped some solid receipts and a process that’s working for folks desperate to dodge the AI bot sniffers. Respect for the info dump and those screenshots. But to be real, while those “humanizer” tools (including the Clever AI Humanizer) definitely seem to toss sand in the gears for some detectors, I guess I’m more skeptical about their long game. Detectors are forever leveling up, so today’s “fix” might be next month’s red flag.

Instead, I focus more on how I can prompt ChatGPT to sound less like a helpful lecturing robot and more like a very tired, caffeine-addled copywriter. Try these (sometimes pain-in-the-neck) hacks:

  1. Prompt Specificity: Instead of just asking “write X,” I add instructions like “sound casual, use contractions, add a joke or two, imagine you’re texting a friend, use short sentences, drop an anecdote, and skip the formal intro.” Sometimes I’ll say: “Write this like you’re slightly annoyed about a Monday morning meeting.” The more context and character, the more it shifts the tone.

  2. Mess With Formatting: No one, and I mean NO ONE, actually writes in flawless, unbroken paragraphs all the time. Ask ChatGPT to break things up—random lists, quick asides, “oh btw” parentheticals, maybe even a typo or two for realism. It’s dumb, but it helps.

  3. Ask for Edits: When you get the response, copy-paste it BACK into ChatGPT with feedback like, “less stiff,” “sound more sarcastic,” or “add more personality.” It won’t always nail it, but it gets pretty close after a few rounds.

  4. Slang, Pop Culture, & Non-Sequiturs: Drop a random meme reference, inside joke, or pop culture nod in your prompt. “Write like you’re recapping this story at a bar, not a business meeting.” AI struggles to keep up with actual weird human tangents, but it’s worth a shot.

I will say, if you absolutely need to pass those AI detectors for whatever reason (no judgment), the combo that @mikeappsreviewer mentioned (especially the Clever AI Humanizer) actually works right now. But personally, I’d rather get better at wrangling ChatGPT with creative prompts and lots of manual editing instead of crutching too hard on external tools—at least until GPTs finally figure out how to capture the agony and randomness of being a human trying to meet a deadline while stress-eating Doritos.

Full disclosure: Sometimes you’ve just gotta accept that even the best AI will occasionally write like a narc who just read about memes for the first time, and we’re all just doing our best to duct-tape some humanity on top. Happy prompting!

Okay, not gonna lie, some of the hacks mentioned by @mikeappsreviewer and @caminantenocturno are solid (def points for the “caffeinated copywriter” idea), but here’s another angle: If you want ChatGPT to sound more human, try ALLOWING it to be a little bit… wrong? I mean, actually instruct the AI to add in uncertainty—“I’m not 100% sure, but…” or “I think that’s how it works…” That subtle imperfection is human AF. Most people kinda second-guess themselves, throw in half-baked thoughts, or meander slightly off-topic for the sake of convo.

Also, mix up the sentence rhythm: have it spit out short, choppy lines right after a wall of text, or deliberately start with “So, anyway—” and end with “IDK, what do you think?” You can even get meta: Ask for an answer that sounds like it was written at 2am, slightly distracted, or halfway thru a Netflix binge. (Yeah, this works, try it.)

Gotta admit, though, the “Clever AI Humanizer” tool that’s getting all that love does seem to help with detector paranoia (useful if your goal is to trick the bots, not just people). But for me, I’d rather see people use ChatGPT as a wonky sidekick, then add a “human pass” edit at the end. Most AI miss the real human stuff: emotional whiplash, complete topic detours, or just pure pettiness.

If you want actual personality, don’t be afraid to inject your own quirks, stubbornness, even a typo here or ther (see what I did there). The best human text isn’t perfect, and sometimes it’s honestly a bit of a mess. Embrace that chaos. Let the robot learn from us for once.