One of the new flagship AI models Meta released on Saturday, Maverick, ranks second on LM Arena, a test that has human raters compare the outputs of models and choose which they prefer. But it seems the version of Maverick that Meta deployed to LM Arena differs from the version thatβs widely available to developers.
As several AI researchers pointed out on X, Meta noted in its announcement that the Maverick on LM Arena is an βexperimental chat version.β A chart on the official Llama website, meanwhile, discloses that Metaβs LM Arena testing was conducted using βLlama 4 Maverick optimized for conversationality.β
As weβve written about before, for various reasons, LM Arena has never been the most reliable measure of an AI modelβs performance. But AI companies generally havenβt customized or otherwise fine-tuned their models to score better on LM Arena β or havenβt admitted to doing so, at least.
The problem with tailoring a model to a benchmark, withholding it, and then releasing a βvanillaβ variant of that same model is that it makes it challenging for developers to predict exactly how well the model will perform in particular contexts. Itβs also misleading. Ideally, benchmarks β woefully inadequate as they are β provide a snapshot of a single modelβs strengths and weaknesses across a range of tasks.
Indeed, researchers on X have observed stark differences in the behavior of the publicly downloadable Maverick compared with the model hosted on LM Arena. The LM Arena version seems to use a lot of emojis, and give incredibly long-winded answers.
Okay Llama 4 is def a littled cooked lol, what is this yap city pic.twitter.com/y3GvhbVz65
β Nathan Lambert (@natolambert) April 6, 2025
for some reason, the Llama 4 model in Arena uses a lot more Emojis
on together . ai, it seems better: pic.twitter.com/f74ODX4zTt
β Tech Dev Notes (@techdevnotes) April 6, 2025
Weβve reached out to Meta and Chatbot Arena, the organization that maintains LM Arena, for comment.