On the same day Google released Gemini 3.1 Flash-Lite, OpenAI also launched a faster version of its GPT-5.3 family on Tuesday.GPT 5.3 Instant is the first model in OpenAI’s GPT 5.3 family, with Pro and Thinking versions coming soon. The Instant models are somewhat of a workhorse in OpenAI’s stable, and in its ‘Auto’ model, ChatGPT routes all tasks it deems easy enough to them. When deeper reasoning is needed, it will pick the Thinking models.GPT-5.3 Instant will reduce “unnecessary dead ends, caveats, and overly declarative phrasing that can interrupt the flow of conversation.”The promise here is that GPT-5.3 Instant will provide better answers than the previous models, which is pretty much table stakes for a new model, but also “richer and better-contextualized results when searching the web,” as OpenAI describes it. What’s maybe more important for users, though, is that the team also got the model to reduce “unnecessary dead ends, caveats, and overly declarative phrasing that can interrupt the flow of conversation.”One problem with the last version of OpenAI’s models is that their guardrails kicked in a bit too often, and that they often refused to answer even benign questions. Sometimes it would get defensive, and often it would start its answers with what OpenAI calls “moralizing preambles.” There should be fewer of those now (maybe Pete Hegseth asked for that?).Dialling down the cringeThe previous model also tended to be a bit “cringe,” OpenAI admits. The new model’s conversation style is now more natural and less likely to make assumptions about the users’ intent and emotions.Credit: OpenAI.From a feature perspective, the major update is that the team tweaked how the model handles web context. OpenAI says the model is now less likely to “overindex on web results” and instead strikes a better balance between search results and its own reasoning capabilities.Those responses should now also be more accurate overall, with OpenAI cutting hallucinations in the new model by 26.8% when it takes web results into account and 19.7% when it relies solely on its own knowledge.For those who need a little bit of help with their writing, OpenAI promises that the new model will “move more fluidly between practical tasks and expressive writing without losing clarity or coherence.”But where are the benchmarks?So far, OpenAI has, for the most part, only provided a qualitative description of the new model. The company has not published any benchmarks yet, but we will update this post once we receive them.The post OpenAI’s GPT-5.3 Instant promises to dial down the cringe appeared first on The New Stack.