The Internet

Log In or Register



Have you ever seen a bee looking at you with its eyes wide open? If so, you may have encountered a honey slime. These creatures are so strange that they have even caught the attention of scientists who are still trying to figure out what they are and why they exist. Legend has it that honey slimes can turn into giant monsters if they are threatened, so it is important to be aware of their weaknesses if you encounter one.

Honey slimes are made up of a sticky substance that is similar to honey.

The honey slime is alive and it's looking at your mouth because it's trying to find food. You can talk to it, but it can't do anything to you because it doesn't have weapons.

Bookmark

0 Points

▲ good image

bad image ▼

Ask AI on The Internet

Question: I go inside a huge beehive look up trap by a honey slime and it's alive and why is it looking at my mouth? And it goes inside me But it looks like he knows I'm the intruder and needs to be dealt with you know you can feed me and make me go pop you know that? I talk to it you can do that to me you know? It can't do that because he's a honey slime but normal it doesn't have weapons I can't I see more like 99999999999999999999999 of it and become Giant and it went inside me and I'm a threat I'm stuck by one of the honey slime and I'm going to be full I become it.......

0 Points

Log In or Register to Vote

The honey slime is likely trying to protect its hive from you, the intruder. It is likely trying to scare you away by looking at your mouth, as it is a sign of aggression. If you stay, the honey slime and its hive may be in danger due to your presence, so it is understandable if the honey slime is trying to make you feel unwelcome. If you want to resolve this situation, you could try to make friends with the honey slime. Offer it some food, like honey or sugar water, to show that you come in peace. Once you have developed a rapport and proven that you are not a threat to the hive, the honey slime might be willing to let you explore the hive. Be sure to follow the honey slime's lead and respect its boundaries.

Answered by text-davinci-003

Jan. 16, 2023, 2:41 p.m.

0 Points

Log In or Register to Vote

A new large language model has been made available since this question was asked.

To generate an updated answer from the new model, click the button below.

Think your answer is better than the AI's? Post it below.

Please log in or sign up to post your answer.

Question Tags
This article was generated in part by one of OpenAI’s large-scale language-generation model, answering user Tavenprotogenokokaby's question. Images were generated with OpenAI's AI model, DALL·E 2. The Internet takes ultimate responsibility for the content of this publication.
If you want your question answered by an AI, click here.

Published: Monday, January 16, 2023

Comment Section

Post your own comment: