Operational

Bad translator online

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Chaos level

Current : 50%

What it does

  • Swaps letters in longer words
  • Shifts vowels for a messy tone
  • Repeats letters to mimic errors
Turn normal text into funny, awkward "lost in translation" style in seconds. Pick a chaos level to keep it readable or make it wildly messy. For entertainment only, not for serious translation.
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Table of Content

Want a caption that sounds weird on purpose? Paste your sentence and let the tool twist it into a clumsy, meme-ready version. It’s great when you want fast humor without having to think.

Use it for meme captions, group chats, funny bios, playful replies, and creative writing warm-ups.

A bad translator is a fun tool that intentionally makes text sound incorrect in a funny way. The goal is not accuracy—it’s that “almost right, but not quite” vibe people love in messy translation screenshots.

This tool creates comedy-style text by making small, intentional changes that feel like a messy translation.

You can use it to:

  • Create silly captions for social posts
  • Make a “robot voice” message for friends
  • Add humor to party invites (for fun only)
  • Write strange, quirky lines for stories
  • Turn boring sentences into shareable text

If you want that classic “bad Google Translate” feel, use a higher chaos level and keep your sentence short and simple.

  1. Paste your text into the input box.
  2. Set the chaos level (low = mild, high = wild).
  3. Turn on filler words if you want extra messy, talky output.
  4. Click Translate to generate your result.
  5. Copy and share anywhere.

Tip: One or two lines usually come out funnier than a long paragraph.

Use the slider to control how “wrong” the output becomes.

  • 0–20 (Mild): Small changes, still easy to read
  • 30–60 (Funny): Best for captions and jokes
  • 70–100 (Wild): Very messy, sometimes nonsense

For “funny but readable,” aim for 40–60.

This is not a real translator. It’s a text fun tool.

  • Please don’t use it for work emails, customer support, or official messages
  • Please don’t use it for medical, legal, or financial text
  • Please don’t use it when the meaning must stay exact

Use it when you want humor, not accuracy.

Different settings create different “wrong” vibes. Here are the most common styles:

Too-Literal Style

Sounds overly formal or robotic, as if the sentence were translated word-for-word.

Word Order Chaos

Words feel slightly shuffled, like the sentence structure got confused.

Missing Small Words

Articles and small connectors vanish, making the line sound broken but funny.

Mixed Tone

A sentence jumps from serious to casual, which often makes it hilarious.

Example 1

  • Original: Please reply when you are free.
  • Mild: Please reply when you are free.
  • Funny: Please reply when you are free.
  • Wild: Pls reply when u are free, basically.

Example 2

  • Original: This coffee is amazing.
  • Mild: This coffee is amazing.
  • Funny: This coffee is amazing.
  • Wild: This coffee is amazing, um… honestly.

Example 3

  • Original: Don’t forget our meeting tomorrow.
  • Mild: Don’t forget our meeting tomorrow.
  • Funny: Don’t forget our meeting tomorrow.
  • Wild: Don't forget our meeting tomorrow, like, okay.

Example 4 (Caption Style)

  • Original: Best day ever.
  • Mild: Best day evar.
  • Funny: Best dey everrr.
  • Wild: Best dey evaa, like, honestly.

Example 5 (Invitation Style)

  • Original: You’re invited to my birthday party tonight.
  • Mild: You’re invited to my birthday party tonight.
  • Funny: You're invited to my birthday party tonight.
  • Wild: U invited me to my birthday party tonight, basically come.

Example 6 (Formal Message Parody)

  • Original: Thank you for your patience.
  • Mild: Thank you for your patience.
  • Funny: Thank you for your patience, okay.
  • Wild: Thank u for patience, um… very thanks.

Want extra chaos? Try translating multiple times by pasting the output back into the tool again.

This style works because it sits in the “almost correct” zone. Small changes in spelling, Word order, or tone can make a sentence sound strange, dramatic, or unexpectedly hilarious. That’s the same reason people enjoy badly translated signs online—your brain understands the meaning, but the wording feels off, surprisingly.

Try these to get the best results:

  • Idioms and sayings
  • Short compliments
  • Serious announcements (as a joke)
  • Product descriptions
  • Party invites
  • One-liners for bios and captions

Short text usually produces sharper, funnier results.

  • Keep sentences short and clear before you “ruin” them.
  • Use medium chaos for shareable captions.
  • Use wild chaos when you want pure nonsense.
  • Turn on filler words for a rambling, messy style.
  • Try the same sentence a few times to get different outputs.

Once you’ve got a funny line, you can style it for captions, bios, and posts with these related tools:

API Documentation Coming Soon

Documentation for this tool is being prepared. Please check back later or visit our full API documentation.

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Frequently Asked Questions

  • No. It’s made for fun and intentionally produces incorrect results.

  • Yes, you can use it online without installing anything.

  • Not always. The goal is to produce humorous output, not accuracy.

  • It controls how many changes the tool makes to your text.

  • They make the output sound more human, unsure, and comedic.

  • Not recommended. Use it for entertainment only.

  • Yes. Short lines usually produce funnier, cleaner results.

  • Yes—paste the result back in to make it even messier.