AI is part of the reason games are not great, as well as overworked devs forced to rush games, crypto, microtransactions, 100 GB day one patches, etc. Games will be great if they are treated as art again. Every time I see an emulated PS2 game or before, I'm just astonished with how polished they are. Even the quirky games were fun. (Almost) everything was built with passion. Plus games were shorter and easier to beat for busy people.
But no, we just need more AI apparently, that will solve the issue. The Minecraft AI frame predictor, I admit, is a fun toy, but can't ever replace a genuine game. Billionaires are such lazy, slop-fanatic couch potatoes that claim workers are too lazy to run a society that benefits humanity.
What the AI dudebro set doesn't seem to understand though is that this is only able to exist because Minecraft exists. A genuine spark of human imagination and ingenuity made one of the most enduring and recognizable imaginary environments ever, and you can get a computer to kinda sorta create a dreamlike facsimile of it with artificial generation.
Exactly, though I just find the tech and concept involved in generating an interactable "movie" of a game interesting. It's a very trippy experience. I honestly don't know how the tech would be useful beyond making slop or to play as a toy, even if state tracking was implemented.
We can't really create anything new if we primarily use AI that depends on human civilization's work for the past century or so (including old media that exists within the datasets). The bourgeoisie is just going to increase the unemployed labor pool until civilization collapses. These bazinga brained lunatics and their anemic businesses that refuse to retain any workers, layoff millions, and force their skeleton departments to work at gunpoint somehow believe this current system will survive once they starve the proletariat off and replace them with energy guzzling AI that isn't capable of doing most of the jobs it is shoved into.
Death to America and the West. I can't wait for its collapse.
AI is part of the reason games are not great, as well as overworked devs forced to rush games, crypto, microtransactions, 100 GB day one patches, etc. Games will be great if they are treated as art again. Every time I see an emulated PS2 game or before, I'm just astonished with how polished they are. Even the quirky games were fun. (Almost) everything was built with passion. Plus games were shorter and easier to beat for busy people.
But no, we just need more AI apparently, that will solve the issue. The Minecraft AI frame predictor, I admit, is a fun toy, but can't ever replace a genuine game. Billionaires are such lazy, slop-fanatic couch potatoes that claim workers are too lazy to run a society that benefits humanity.
What the AI dudebro set doesn't seem to understand though is that this is only able to exist because Minecraft exists. A genuine spark of human imagination and ingenuity made one of the most enduring and recognizable imaginary environments ever, and you can get a computer to kinda sorta create a dreamlike facsimile of it with artificial generation.
Exactly, though I just find the tech and concept involved in generating an interactable "movie" of a game interesting. It's a very trippy experience. I honestly don't know how the tech would be useful beyond making slop or to play as a toy, even if state tracking was implemented.
We can't really create anything new if we primarily use AI that depends on human civilization's work for the past century or so (including old media that exists within the datasets). The bourgeoisie is just going to increase the unemployed labor pool until civilization collapses. These bazinga brained lunatics and their anemic businesses that refuse to retain any workers, layoff millions, and force their skeleton departments to work at gunpoint somehow believe this current system will survive once they starve the proletariat off and replace them with energy guzzling AI that isn't capable of doing most of the jobs it is shoved into.
Death to America and the West. I can't wait for its collapse.