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Continuous full-body shot of @rickyberwick sitting in his computer chair at a desk with a laptop in a normally lit office (no RGB). His real human face is unchanged, but his body is an animatronic — exposed metal frame, hinges, pistons, and wiring — while wearing a Reese’s logo shirt. He moves stiffly and awkwardly. No dialogue, only a robotic “uhhhhhhhhh.”

How rickyberwick Made This Animatronic Office Chair Man AI Video - and How to Recreate It

This video works by placing a bizarre creature design inside the most ordinary possible environment. The face remains human and recognizable, but everything below it is exposed animatronic machinery. Because the office setting is so normal, the body design feels even stranger and funnier.

The static desk setup makes the clip read like a cursed webcam reality rather than a sci-fi action scene. That grounded framing is a major part of the appeal.

Contrast Engine

The humor comes from three layers of contrast: normal office, normal human face, abnormal robotic body. None of those layers are enough on their own. The image gets memorable only when all three stay visible in the same full-body frame.

Scene Design

A recreation should avoid over-stylization. The better version looks like a normal workday interrupted by impossible anatomy. Small chair movements, slight torso shifts, and one dragged-out robotic vocal sound are enough. Overacting would weaken the deadpan mechanical weirdness.

Prompt Takeaways

The prompt should explicitly lock a plain office, unchanged human facial identity, and a visibly mechanical body structure. It also helps to ban flashy sci-fi lighting and action framing. The point is not futuristic spectacle. The point is seeing something deeply wrong in a completely familiar room.