
When you strip it down, a great ‘would you rather’ thread isn’t about the question; it’s about the conversation that explodes underneath it. On Reddit, those micro‑debates are gold for brands, agencies, and creators: you see language people actually use, objections they really have, and desires they’d never write in a survey.
The catch? Running WYR at scale is work. You brainstorm prompts, check if they’ve been overused, schedule posts across subreddits, reply to comments, and track what hits. After a week, the game feels like a job.
That’s where an AI computer agent changes the equation. Instead of you living inside Reddit all day, the agent can:
You stay as the strategist who decides which insights become campaigns, offers, or hooks—while the agent does the repetitive clicking, scrolling, and copy‑pasting.
Delegating WYR on Reddit to an AI agent turns a time‑sink into a research and engagement engine that runs every day, not just when you have a free afternoon.
Useful: Reddit’s general help center at https://support.reddithelp.com explains accounts, posts, and rules.
Example: “Would you rather 10x traffic with poor leads or flat traffic with dream buyers only?”
See posting basics at https://support.reddithelp.com/hc/en-us/sections for official guidance on posts and communities.
Manual methods are great for learning but don’t scale. That’s where no‑code and AI come in.
You can automate parts of the flow using tools like Zapier, Make, or n8n combined with Reddit’s API.
High‑level steps:
Pros: Less manual posting, repeatable cadence.
Cons: You still write prompts and analyze comments yourself.
This gives you a lightweight research pipeline without living in Reddit.
For API and app details, start from Reddit’s official docs linked from https://support.reddithelp.com and the “Reddit API” section in their developer resources.
Now we move from partial automation to a true AI computer agent that uses your desktop and browser like a human. Simular’s agents (see https://www.simular.ai/simular-pro) are designed exactly for this: they can click, type, navigate the Reddit UI, update Sheets, and more—reliably and transparently.
Goal: Continuously discover winning WYR formats and generate new prompts.
How it works:
Pros: Data‑backed prompts, zero manual browsing.
Cons: Needs an initial configuration of what “good” looks like and where to search.
Goal: Fully delegate recurring Reddit WYR campaigns.
Workflow the agent can execute:
Pros: Truly hands‑off execution, production‑grade reliability, every action is logged and inspectable (no black box).
Cons: Requires clearer guardrails and testing before you unleash it on many subreddits.
Goal: Turn Reddit WYR results into usable assets for the rest of the business.
Steps:
Pros: Closed loop from Reddit to revenue; minimal manual copy/paste.
Cons: You must define how sensitive data and brand guidelines are enforced.
To see how Simular builds agents that behave like real users—with transparent step‑by‑step execution—review the product overview at https://www.simular.ai/simular-pro and the company’s approach at https://www.simular.ai/about.
Start from the outcome you want: insight, engagement, or soft lead generation. For insight, base your ‘would you rather’ on a real tradeoff your buyers face: price vs. speed, quality vs. convenience, growth vs. lifestyle. Phrase the question so both options are plausible and a bit painful.
Structure each post like this: (1) A concise title that states the WYR question, ideally under 120 characters. (2) A 1–2 sentence setup in the body that anchors it in a real scenario (“You’re launching a new SaaS next month…”). (3) A clear CTA such as “Explain your choice like you would to a teammate.”
Before posting, search your target subreddit for ‘would you rather’ to avoid repeating overused prompts. Keep language in line with the community’s tone. Finally, prepare a few follow‑up questions you can drop in replies to deepen the conversation—those threads often yield the best copy and insight.
Cadence depends on subreddit size and sensitivity to self‑promotion. As a rule of thumb, for mid‑size subs (50k–500k members), start with 1 ‘would you rather’ post per week. Watch mod feedback and community reactions; if posts get upvotes and comments without complaints, you can increase to 2–3 per week across multiple related subreddits.
Create a rotation: vary topics (offer, messaging, product, lifestyle) so you don’t fatigue readers. Use a simple content calendar—sheet columns for date, subreddit, prompt, and status—to avoid double‑posting the same idea.
If you’re using an AI agent like Simular’s, encode guardrails: maximum posts per subreddit per week, quiet hours, and a list of communities that are off‑limits. Always leave room for organic participation; mix WYR with other helpful posts so you’re seen as a contributor, not a poll‑spam account.
Treat every WYR thread as a mini focus group. After 24–48 hours, export or copy the top 50–200 comments. Read them with three lenses: (1) exact phrases people use to describe pains or desires, (2) patterns in what they’re afraid of or optimizing for, and (3) unexpected angles that challenge your assumptions.
Manually, you can tag comments in a spreadsheet with labels like PRICE, TRUST, SPEED, STATUS. Count how many comments fall into each bucket; that tells you which tension resonates. Then, turn the strongest comments into copy assets: headline templates, objection‑handling bullets, or story ideas for emails.
With a Simular AI agent, you can automate this: have the agent scrape comments, cluster them, and output a one‑page summary plus a list of verbatim quotes. Review and highlight the most powerful lines, then feed them into your ad platforms, landing pages, and outbound scripts.
The main risks are community backlash, rule violations, and tone mismatches. Redditors spot low‑effort automation quickly, especially if prompts feel generic or off‑topic. To reduce risk, always respect subreddit rules: some communities ban surveys or market research outright. Have your agent—or you—check the ‘About’ section and pinned rules before posting.
Start with a small test: use a secondary account and a single subreddit to validate that your automated WYR posts add value. Keep your AI agent’s actions transparent and review its logs regularly; Simular’s design helps here because every step is inspectable.
Also, avoid automating direct self‑promotion. Use WYR for insight and relationship‑building, then bring lessons into off‑Reddit assets (landing pages, content). If you ever get moderator feedback, treat it as guidance: adjust frequency, format, or stop using automation in that community altogether.
Map your entire workflow first: ideation → posting → engagement → analysis → application. Decide which steps must stay human (e.g., brand‑sensitive replies, final insight interpretation) and which are repetitive (scrolling, copy‑pasting, logging metrics).
With an AI computer agent like Simular’s, start by recording a clean demonstration run on your Mac: visiting Reddit, opening specific subreddits, posting a WYR, and logging the URL into a Google Sheet. Turn that into a repeatable workflow inside Simular Pro. Next, add logic: when the sheet has a new prompt row, the agent posts it; after 24 hours, it returns to scrape comments and summarize them.
Use Simular’s transparent execution to audit each run—correct navigation mistakes, refine prompts, and tighten safety rules. Finally, connect the agent’s outputs to your broader stack via webhooks so summaries land in Slack, Notion, or your CRM, turning casual Reddit debates into a structured input for sales and marketing decisions.