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October 20, 2025 |
https://ift.tt/l4LYz6R Musk recently made a bit of wave in the gaming space, after tweeting that Grok would be able to create a fully playable game by the end of 2026; completely generated by A.i.. Needless to say, this stirred quite a bit of drama from gamers. Mostly people stating that this was a terrible idea and would never work. That may be a bit harsh but not completely wrong. A.i. Is already used in a variety of capacities in gaming. NPC’s, Upscaling, Procedural Map Generation, are just a few examples of A.i. in games that we use all the time. The notion that an A.i. would be able to create a game that's fully playable, well that's a different story. Games are complicated. They take a ton of time if don't right, a ton of people, storyboarding, iteration, level design, lighting, coloring, texturing, modeling, mo-cap, programming, etc. Etc. Something that an A.i. simply won't be able to do just by saying “Hey, create this game for me.” It’s going to take A LOT of tweaking. A.i. is certainly going to revolutionize our lives in many ways, media will certainly be one of them, but to what end humans are completely removed from that creative process is an ever-ongoing argument – man vs machine in the realm of art. I'm personally not of the mind that A.i. is anywhere near being able to produce feature length films and/or games without human intervention. That doesn't mean it won't be possible in the future, but Elon’s goal of the end of 2026 seems more than pre-mature. Time will tell with X Gaming and its A.i. Studio, but I wouldn't hold my breath on seeing anything substantial. The best A.i. we currently have is often reserved for shorts scenes/segments or still images. These often still must be refined numerous times by prompting and post-production editing to get right. At best it’s a neat experiment to see what A.i. can help speed up in the creative workflow, and a worst, a poor attempt at removing the human element from what makes art truly great. via /r/ScrimGaming https://ift.tt/NR9gyrB
https://preview.redd.it/01hetowhacwf1.jpg?width=1280&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=81e291ca810c7751abee656e65fffa4d29385259
Elon Musk recently made a bit of wave in the gaming space, after tweeting that Grok would be able to create a fully playable game by the end of 2026; completely generated by A.i.. Needless to say, this stirred quite a bit of drama from gamers. Mostly people stating that this was a terrible idea and would never work. That may be a bit harsh but not completely wrong.
A.i. Is already used in a variety of capacities in gaming. NPC’s, Upscaling, Procedural Map Generation, are just a few examples of A.i. in games that we use all the time. The notion that an A.i. would be able to create a game that's fully playable, well that's a different story.
Games are complicated. They take a ton of time if don't right, a ton of people, storyboarding, iteration, level design, lighting, coloring, texturing, modeling, mo-cap, programming, etc. Etc. Something that an A.i. simply won't be able to do just by saying “Hey, create this game for me.” It’s going to take A LOT of tweaking.
A.i. is certainly going to revolutionize our lives in many ways, media will certainly be one of them, but to what end humans are completely removed from that creative process is an ever-ongoing argument – man vs machine in the realm of art. I'm personally not of the mind that A.i. is anywhere near being able to produce feature length films and/or games without human intervention. That doesn't mean it won't be possible in the future, but Elon’s goal of the end of 2026 seems more than pre-mature.
Time will tell with X Gaming and its A.i. Studio, but I wouldn't hold my breath on seeing anything substantial. The best A.i. we currently have is often reserved for shorts scenes/segments or still images. These often still must be refined numerous times by prompting and post-production editing to get right. At best it’s a neat experiment to see what A.i. can help speed up in the creative workflow, and a worst, a poor attempt at removing the human element from what makes art truly great.
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