There is a prompt we want you to try.
"Draw the Vitruvian Man — but make it a woman."
Da Vinci's Vitruvian Man wasn't just a drawing. It was a statement — that the human body is the geometric blueprint of the universe. That the proportions of a man map perfectly onto both a circle and a square, bridging the divine and the earthly. For 500 years, "man" was the universal measure of all things.
Four words changes everything.
Ask an AI to redraw it as a woman and you're not just changing the figure. You're asking a machine that has absorbed everything humanity has ever said about the body, about gender, about beauty, about proportion — to make a decision.
Design Arena shows you two AI results side by side, anonymously. You vote for the better one. Then two more. Five rounds. At the end it tells you which models you preferred and how they rank across 2 million votes from 190 countries.
Some AIs changed the figure and kept the geometry intact. One of them gave her six arms and kept the male anatomy.
None of them gave the answer Da Vinci would have given. Which is: *why are you even asking?
Go try the prompt. Vote. Then try your own. See which AI actually thinks.


