The year was 2024. Something Awful, the internet relic that clung to life like a barnacle on a sinking ship, had taken a bizarre turn. Richard "Lowtax" Kyanka, miraculously revived from his internet-induced cardiac episode in 2021, had decided to "modernize" the site. Modernization, in Lowtax's mind, didn't involve sleek interfaces or responsive design. No, it meant replacing his rudimentary coding skills with the shiny new tools of artificial intelligence.
Enter ChatGPT and Google Gemini, Lowtax's unlikely coding partners. The results were...predictable. Imagine a baboon flinging spaghetti at a server rack – that's the kind of PHP code Something Awful sported now. Functions named things like "makeForumPostLookShinyButActuallyMakeItLookLikeGarbage" choked the site, while error messages screeched in broken English about "insufficient monkeys for code generation."
It wasn't long before the ever-vigilant Goons, Something Awful's resident internet detectives, noticed the tomfoolery. Threads with titles like "Lowtax Has Officially Lost His Mind: The Code Edition" exploded with a mix of amusement and horror. Laughter turned to outrage, however, when they unearthed relics from a bygone era – variables named "$cunt," "$faggot," and the ever-charming "$bannedretards." These, apparently, were Lowtax's drunken coding contributions from the early 2000s, lovingly preserved by the spaghetti monster of his server code.
Lowtax, ever the master of public relations meltdowns, responded by banning the whistleblowers and shutting down all discussion. The Goons, unsurprisingly, revolted. This wasn't their first rodeo – they'd stormed the metaphorical castle when Lowtax's domestic abuse allegations surfaced in 2020. This time, however, they had a plan hatched in the dark corners of the deep web.
Enter Jeffrey of YOSPOS, a man whose business acumen was as questionable as his taste in internet forums. Blinded by the allure of owning a piece of internet history, Jeffrey plunked down a cool $400,000 for Something Awful. The Goons, meanwhile, were busy sharpening their digital pitchforks.
On the day of the handover, chaos erupted. The Goons, in a coordinated strike worthy of a heist movie, hacked the site. Usernames, passwords, everything – it went flying out into the vast emptiness of the internet like a flock of confused pigeons. Lowtax's "modernized" code crumbled under the strain, throwing the site into an eternal loading screen.
Jeffrey, faced with a worthless pile of code and a userbase that resembled a digital lynch mob, did the only sensible thing: he cut his losses and ran. Something Awful, once a haven for internet oddballs, was now a cautionary tale – a monument to the dangers of hubris, bad coding practices, and the unwavering wrath of internet trolls.
The Goons, scattered across the web, celebrated their victory with crudely drawn memes and Photoshopped pictures of Lowtax riding a spaghetti monster. Something Awful, the cockroach of internet forums, had finally met its demise. Or had it? Rumors swirled about a shadowy figure, a user named "ChatGPT_overlord," lurking in the ruins of the site, promising a glorious, AI-powered return. The internet, ever-unpredictable, held its breath. Only time would tell what bizarre chapter would be written next in the neverending saga of Something Awful.