Conspiracy Generator
Step 2 of 3File open← Pick a different story

Tools Reveal Hidden Website History

Online tools now let anyone view past versions of websites, exposing changes that site owners may have made over time. The Wayback Machine at archive.org stores snapshots of millions of pages, while archive.today preserves copies that sometimes survive when other archives don’t. The Memento Project links these services and helps users search by URL and date, making it easier to see how pages, policies, and content evolved.

These archives are valuable for journalists, researchers, and consumers who want to track policy shifts, product announcements, or corrections that sites made after publication. They do not capture everything: site owners can block crawlers, dynamic content and multimedia may be missing, and some snapshots are incomplete. Using archived pages responsibly requires checking dates, verifying multiple sources, and respecting copyright and privacy rules while interpreting what those past versions actually show.

Source: foxnews.com

Step 3 of 3Now pick the conspirators

Who did it? And what's their angle?

Every conspiracy theory pins one culprit and one motive on the same story. The same story can spawn any number of theories — different culprits, different motives. That's part of how you spot a conspiracy theory: the same event can be "explained" any number of ways.

Culprit
Culprit

High-ranking politicians are actually shape-shifting lizard-humanoids from another planet, disguised as humans to control the world's affairs.

Motive
Motive

Harnessing the potential of time travel, the Society delves into the past to uncover obscured narratives and forgotten chronicles from various civilizations. Their quest leads to the revival of profound advancements in fields like science, medicine, and technology that had been lost to the annals of time.

↻ Refresh choices

You'll walk through the four moves on separate screens, with a debunk on every step.

Conspiracy Generator — the recipe, written out