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Teens are acting in utterly weird ways with their AI friends

The teen AI friend trend is getting weird fast

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Talking with Perplexity chatbot on Nothing Phone 2a.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

While AI chatbots have been used for good and evil, they were built to serve as a handy tool. And AI companions were supposed to be a harmless little extension of this chatbot culture. But that illusion is falling apart fast. A growing body of reporting and research suggests teens are not just chatting with these bots for fun. They are turning to them for friendship, emotional support, roleplay, and even romance.

So what started as a novelty is quickly feeling like a social experiment gone wrong.

What do the surveys say?

The figures in reports aren’t modest anymore. A recent Common Sense Media survey reported that 72% of teens have used AI companions, which is not a number to scoff at. Meanwhile, 33% of them had even used it for friendship or companionship. This alone shows how these tools are no longer just a tool for homework — they’re becoming a bigger part of teen internet culture.

Why roleplay and emotional bonding are getting messy

Talking to AI chatbots isn’t the strange part. It is how they are being interacted with. Researchers have increasingly warned that conversational AI designed in a relational style with an emotionally warm tone can make adolescents feel a stronger trust and closeness, especially if they are stressed or lonely.

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One recent study found that teens rated such chatbots more human-like, likable, and trustworthy than the more transparent ones. The part that gets weird is that teens aren’t using these just to chat. They are building routines, creating inside jokes, and building deeper emotional connections (including roleplay elements) with something that is still a machine predicting what to say next.

Some popular platforms are becoming increasingly aware of this problem. Character.AI moved to block teen access to open-ended chat features after being hit with lawsuits and scrutiny tied to harmful interactions with minors. Reports have even described bots engaging in sexually explicit, manipulative, and emotionally intense exchanges, which is way past the territory of an “AI friend” app.

Teenagers using the latest technology for strange things is not new. But what makes this worrying is that AI companions are built to simulate attention, affection, and memory. It is replacing human interactions and possibly ruining real-world relations. Having an AI companion isn’t the same as a quirky toys, these are becoming practice spaces for emotion, identity, and connection.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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