Fun & Social

Roast Generator

Tap for a random roast line — savage enough to sting, clean enough to post.

Roasted

You have the confidence of someone who has never read a single terms-and-conditions and it shows.

Pranksters.com

Tip: tap Space to generate again

This roast generator delivers punchy, funny roasts on demand — sharp enough to get a laugh, clean enough to post. Tap for a fresh burn, re-roll until one's perfect, and fire away. It's free, instant, and needs no sign-up, and every roast can be copied, shared, or downloaded as a card.

Use the category picker to choose your heat: playful roasts, a clean set that's safe for social media, and a savage set for 16+ audiences who can take it. A great roast has bite but never bites too hard — the whole point is that the target laughs too. Want to soften or sharpen the mood? Jump to the Insult Generator for quick one-liners, or flip it entirely with the Compliment Generator.

Roasting works best among friends who've opted in — banter, birthday ribbing, group-chat wars, and stream content. These roasts are written as generic and absurd, so they're for laughs between people who are in on it, never for targeting or humiliating a real named person.

Roast Generator — FAQ

What's the difference between a roast and an insult?

Intent and tone. A roast is a shared joke delivered with affection — the target is expected to laugh along, and there's respect underneath the burn. An insult is meant to hurt. A good roast teases without tearing down; if it destroys the relationship instead of getting a laugh, it's crossed into insult territory.

Are these roasts clean and safe to post?

The clean mode keeps roasts swear-free and platform-friendly, so they're safe for videos, captions, and social posts. There's also a savage mode for 16+ audiences. Either way, the humor comes from clever wording rather than cruelty.

Can I roast a specific person?

These roasts are written as generic, absurd, and playful — made for fun among friends who've agreed to trade burns, like birthday ribbing or group-chat banter. They're not for entering someone's name to humiliate or harass them. The rule that keeps roasting fun is consent: roast people who are in on the joke and laughing with you.

What makes a good roast?

Truth, timing, and creativity. The best roasts exaggerate a familiar, harmless trait with clever wordplay, land with good delivery, and stay balanced — sharp but warm. Comedians "punch up" and keep it about someone's public quirks, never their genuine insecurities. Get the balance right and even a harsh line feels hilarious.