A full guide to chatting with Verity — what to say, how her personality shifts the longer you talk, and what triggers her most unsettling responses.
Talking to Verity isn't a Minecraft feature — it's a text-chat simulator that lives entirely in your browser. You type a message, Verity replies, and over the course of the conversation her tone gradually shifts. The simulator tracks how many messages you've exchanged and changes her personality in three stages.
Verity is warm, a little unsure of herself, and asks questions about your world. This is the easiest stage to talk through — just respond naturally.
Verity starts noticing patterns in what you say, recalls earlier parts of the conversation, and hints that she knows more than she should.
Her tone shifts fully. She references how many times you've visited and brings up things you said in past sessions — even across browser visits.
Beyond the natural conversation, certain words trigger special responses that change depending on which stage you're in. Try working these into the conversation:
Asking "are you real?" early on gets a playful answer. Ask the same question after 17+ messages, and the response is noticeably different.
Yes. The simulator stores your progress locally in your browser using localStorage — nothing is uploaded anywhere.
If you tell Verity your name early on, she may use it later. If you close the tab and come back days later, she'll know
you've returned and may reference how long it's been.
Verity isn't a real in-game mod — the chat happens through this unofficial browser simulator inspired by the viral video. You type messages and Verity responds, with her tone changing the longer you talk.
Anything. Ask questions, share your name, or talk about your world. Specific words like "real," "name," or "scared" trigger special responses that change by stage.
The simulator is built in three stages — friendly, uncanny, then unsettling — mirroring the escalating tone of the original creepypasta-style video.
Yes — progress is saved locally in your browser, so returning visitors get personalized greetings and callbacks to earlier chats.