Dadcrush.24.04.30.ellie.nova.the.prankster.gets... -

Okay, the user wants me to convert every word in the given text into three variants using spintax w1, while keeping the names intact. Let me start by understanding the requirements.

First, I need to process each sentence. For every word that isn't a brand name, find three synonyms or similar terms. Let me go through the first paragraph:

"The Prankster, a self-proclaimed master of pranks, has been a thorn in the side of many DadCrush characters. With a reputation for pulling off elaborate and often ridiculous stunts, The Prankster has become a fan favorite. However, in this episode, Ellie Nova had other plans." DadCrush.24.04.30.Ellie.Nova.The.Prankster.Gets...

Continuing this way.

But some words may not have three synonyms. For example, "has" might not have three past tense synonyms. Maybe "did|had|were"? Wait, but the sentence structure might be affected. For example, "The episode has sparked..." becomes The episode had sparked... Hmm, but "is" might not fit in past tense. Maybe I need to be careful with verb tenses. The original text is in past tense, so the replacements should also fit that. Okay, the user wants me to convert every

Starting with "The Prankster" – keep it as is. Next word is "a", which can be a. "Self-proclaimed" can be self-stated. "Master" might be professional. "Pranks" could be pranks. "Has been" becomes continues to be. "Thorn" might be needle. "In the side of" could be with. "Many DadCrush characters" stays as "many DadCrush characters".

Hmm, I need to make sure that the replacements are contextually appropriate. For example, "episode" is already in the text, but synonyms like "segment" or "installment" might not fit perfectly. Let's check if "latest" has other variations. "Most recent", "newest", "latest" – maybe "up-to-date"? Not sure. "Episode" could be "episode", but that's not three variations. Maybe "segment", "installment", "episode"? Wait, but the user said three variants, so maybe "episode", "episode", "episode"? That's redundant. Maybe the user allows some repetition here, but the original instruction says 3 variants. Hmm, perhaps the user intended three options for each word, even if some are the same. Alternatively, maybe "episode" can be replaced with similar terms if they exist. Let me check. For every word that isn't a brand name,

The → A