SquareEnix released a free tech demo of how AI can be used in games, but the showcase isn't inspiring confidence in players so far.
At this year’s Game Developers Conference, AI made headlines. Several talks revolved around the evolving tech, with developers discussing how it could be integrated into games. That was a controversial topic during the show, but one presentation seemed to wow attendees. Square Enix hosted a 30-minute live demo of an AI mystery game that showed how the tech could be a force for good, giving players more control over what they say and having NPCs that respond to prompts accordingly.
Related They’re not wrong. The educational project isn’t exactly a strong first look for the potential marriage of gaming and AI. The Portopia Serial Murder Case is an odd tech demo that seems to make the problems it aims to solve much worse. Despite that, I’m not ready to write off Square Enix’s efforts entirely based on the experiment, as I can see some areas where the tech could be useful in the long run.
The introduction goes on to explain that those restrictions came down to the title’s Natural Language Processing , which was limited at the time. The new project acts as a showcase of how much that’s changed in 40 years as Square Enix shows off the improved NLP it’s currently working with. Unfortunately, the tech demo doesn’t currently impress in the way it’s meant to.
Part of the confusion I experienced seemingly comes down to a big tech omission. Square Enix noted that it had to remove the demo’s Natural Language Generation tool for now, citing the current risk of “unethical replies.” That aspect is what made the demo such an impressive showcase at GDC, so its absence here is a little confusing.
Deutschland Neuesten Nachrichten, Deutschland Schlagzeilen
Similar News:Sie können auch ähnliche Nachrichten wie diese lesen, die wir aus anderen Nachrichtenquellen gesammelt haben.
How viral bodycam game tricked us into thinking it was real | Digital TrendsUnrecord is a bodycam first-person game that looks too good to be real, but it's using some clever filtering and next-gen tools to achieve its photorealism.
Weiterlesen »
Inside the Vera C. Rubin Observatory (and its giant camera) | Digital TrendsThe Vera C. Rubin Observatory houses the world's largest digital camera. Here's how it'll help astronomers explore the cosmos
Weiterlesen »
Don't start Tears of the Kingdom without playing this Zelda game | Digital TrendsYou might be planning to revisit Breath of the Wild before Tears of the Kingdom, but don't forget another crucial chapter in Link's story.
Weiterlesen »
NAD CS1 review: bare-bones network streamer | Digital TrendsNAD's new CS1 networkstreamer gives you plenty of ways to stream, but unfortunately, not a lot of smarts.
Weiterlesen »
The 8 scariest scenes in the Evil Dead franchise | Digital TrendsNow that EvilDead Rise has premiered in theaters, we list the SamRaimi horror franchise's scariest and goriest moments ever.
Weiterlesen »
The 7 best Guy Ritchie movies, ranked | Digital TrendsWith The Covenant now in theaters, DT looks back at the storied career of director GuyRitchie and lists his best movies by their Rotten Tomatoes score.
Weiterlesen »