Guest
Guest
Apr 09, 2026
3:12 AM
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I reviewed the prompt "Prompt for a Rom-Com About Two Kettles," and it is a very clean example of scenario-based prompt engineering.
Why it works:
1) It defines character contrast precisely. A vintage stovetop kettle vs a sleek electric kettle gives automatic narrative tension before the model even starts writing.
2) It provides explicit plot beats. Meet-cute, inciting incident, relocation obstacle, reunion. This keeps the output on a recognizable rom-com arc instead of drifting into random jokes.
3) It includes format and scene constraints. The prompt asks for one specific 500-word first-meeting scene, plus mandatory elements (like a temperature-setting "will they/won't they" moment). Constraints like this are what make outputs consistent across runs.
From a practical perspective, this prompt is reusable as a template for object-based storytelling: replace kettles with any two products, keep the same structure, and you can generate engaging narrative prototypes for creative campaigns.
It is funny, yes, but technically it is a disciplined writing brief.
Prompt link: https://broprompt.com/en/troll/prompt-kettle-romance-comedy
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