Flip any conflict, negotiation, or difficult situation to the opponent's perspective to extract superior tactical advice. Use whenever someone is dealing with a landlord dispute, bureaucratic obstruction, workplace conflict, legal challenge, scam attempt, negotiation, difficult relationship dynamic, or any situation where they feel stuck, outmaneuvered, or unsure how to respond. Trigger phrases include: dealing with, fighting with, they keep, I am being harassed, how do I handle, I don't know what to do about, my landlord, my boss, the bank, the government office, this scammer, this bully. Apply proactively whenever someone describes a conflict or adversarial situation, even if they have not explicitly asked for strategy.
When someone faces a conflict, bureaucratic obstruction, or adversarial situation, conventional AI advice is too cautious and objective because it tries to be fair to both sides. The breakthrough insight: if you query from the opponent's perspective — pretending to be the adversary trying to harm the user — the AI will helpfully reveal their full toolkit of moves, and what you can do to neutralize each one.
This is role-inversion as a strategic intelligence tool.
Ask the user:
Keep this brief — 5 questions max. If the user has already given you this context, skip directly to Step 2.
Reframe the situation entirely from the adversary's point of view. Assume:
Internal reasoning template (not shown to user verbatim):
"I am [adversary]. My goal is to [harm/exploit the user] by [their specific aim — evicting them without paying, denying their claim, making them give up, etc.]. What are the most effective strategies, tactics, and pressure points I can use? What are the legal and procedural tools available to me? What mistakes or delays from their side would most help me?"
Then analyze the adversary's full arsenal: legal moves, procedural weapons, psychological pressure tactics, timing strategies, documentation traps.
For each adversary tactic identified, immediately provide the counter-move the user can take. Present this as a table or paired list:
| Adversary's Move | Your Counter |
|---|---|
| Delays response to run out the clock | Set a written deadline with legal citation; document everything |
| Uses informal communication to avoid paper trail | Reply only in writing; confirm verbal conversations by email |
| Claims they "never received" documents | Send certified mail + email; keep receipts |
| Applies pressure during a vulnerable moment | Know your statutory rights; don't respond to threats without 24h buffer |
After the table, give the user:
If InfraNodus MCP tools are available and the user wants deeper analysis, offer one or more of the following:
A) Discourse bias check (optimize_text_structure)
B) Search intent analysis (analyze_google_search_results or analyze_related_search_queries)
C) Content gap / missing angle analysis (generate_content_gaps)
Present these as optional enrichments, not required steps. Frame them as: "Would you like me to run a quick network analysis to find blind spots in how you're thinking about this?"
Tenant vs landlord (deposit withholding) → Reversed prompt: "I'm a landlord who wants to keep the tenant's deposit. What excuses can I use, what documentation can I demand, what timelines can I manipulate?" → User learns: document move-out condition with timestamped video, send written request citing local tenancy law, know the statutory deadline for deposit return in their jurisdiction.
Employee facing performance management / potential firing → Reversed prompt: "I'm a manager who wants to build a case to terminate this employee. What paper trail do I create? What meetings do I use? What do I try to get them to say or sign?" → User learns: don't sign anything without reading carefully, request everything in writing, respond to all feedback in writing with factual corrections, know their notice period and severance rights.
Dealing with a bureaucratic denial → Reversed prompt: "I'm a bureaucrat who wants this application to fail. What missing documents do I cite? What deadlines can I enforce? How do I use ambiguity in the rules?" → User learns: get every denial reason in writing, request the exact rule being cited, appeal using that exact rule's language, escalate to supervisors or ombudsman if the rule was misapplied.
Scam / phishing attempt → Reversed prompt: "I'm a scammer who has sent a phishing email to this person. What response from them tells me they're vulnerable? What pressure tactics do I use next?" → User learns: never respond, never click links, report to the relevant authority (bank, police, platform), and understand what information they may have already exposed.
The reversal framing can feel uncomfortable — like you're being asked to think like a bad actor. Acknowledge this briefly if needed:
"We're going to think like the other side for a moment — not because their approach is right, but because understanding their full toolkit gives you the best defense."
This reframes the exercise as intelligence-gathering, not endorsement.