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  3. Gaming market melts down after Google reveals new AI game design tool — Project Genie crashes stocks. (A.K.A . Investors panic because they don't understand what "real" videogames are)

Gaming market melts down after Google reveals new AI game design tool — Project Genie crashes stocks. (A.K.A . Investors panic because they don't understand what "real" videogames are)

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  • ekZeppE ekZepp

    Yesterday, Google announced Project Genie, a new generative AI tool that can apparently create entire games from just prompts. It leverages the Genie 3 and Gemini models to generate a 60-second interactive world rather than a fully playable one. Despite this, many investors were scared out of their wits, imagining this as the future of game development, resulting in a massive stock sell-off that has sent the share prices of various video game companies plummeting.

    The firms affected by this include Rockstar owner Take-Two Interactive, developer/distributors like CD Projekt Red and Nintendo, along with even Roblox — that one actually makes sense. Most of the games you find on the platform, including the infamous "Steal a Brainrot," are not too far from AI slop, so it's poetic that the product of a neural network is what hurt its stock.

    Unity's share price fell the most at 20%, since it's a popular game engine. Generally speaking, that's how most games operate: they use a software framework, such as Unity or Unreal Engine, which provides basic functionality like physics, rendering, input, and sound. Studios then build their vision on top of these, and some developers even have their own custom in-house solutions, such as Rockstar's RAGE or Guerrilla's Decima.

    S This user is from outside of this forum
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    slazer2au
    wrote last edited by
    #10

    So what i am hearing is buy in the dip?

    BeeegScaaawyCrippleH sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.comS 2 Replies Last reply
    43
    • KronusdarkK Kronusdark

      It’s Google, so it will last two years MAX.

      I Cast FistI This user is from outside of this forum
      I Cast FistI This user is from outside of this forum
      I Cast Fist
      wrote last edited by
      #11

      killedbygoogle.com's already polishing the new tombstone

      tourist@lemmy.worldT 1 Reply Last reply
      63
      • K kronarbob@lemmy.world
        • Step 1 : buy some shares that fell down
        • Step 2 : Wait for the IA fuckery to collapse
        • Step 3 :
        • Step 4 : profit
        I Cast FistI This user is from outside of this forum
        I Cast FistI This user is from outside of this forum
        I Cast Fist
        wrote last edited by
        #12

        Step 3: market remains irrational, loops back to step 3

        K 1 Reply Last reply
        19
        • ekZeppE ekZepp

          Yesterday, Google announced Project Genie, a new generative AI tool that can apparently create entire games from just prompts. It leverages the Genie 3 and Gemini models to generate a 60-second interactive world rather than a fully playable one. Despite this, many investors were scared out of their wits, imagining this as the future of game development, resulting in a massive stock sell-off that has sent the share prices of various video game companies plummeting.

          The firms affected by this include Rockstar owner Take-Two Interactive, developer/distributors like CD Projekt Red and Nintendo, along with even Roblox — that one actually makes sense. Most of the games you find on the platform, including the infamous "Steal a Brainrot," are not too far from AI slop, so it's poetic that the product of a neural network is what hurt its stock.

          Unity's share price fell the most at 20%, since it's a popular game engine. Generally speaking, that's how most games operate: they use a software framework, such as Unity or Unreal Engine, which provides basic functionality like physics, rendering, input, and sound. Studios then build their vision on top of these, and some developers even have their own custom in-house solutions, such as Rockstar's RAGE or Guerrilla's Decima.

          I Cast FistI This user is from outside of this forum
          I Cast FistI This user is from outside of this forum
          I Cast Fist
          wrote last edited by
          #13

          Tools like Project Genie could genuinely help here, saving developers time they'd otherwise spend in the early stages of the game, before level design is locked in.

          But in that way, AI is the solution to an artificial problem that should've been solved without it; for all that matters, devs could still find a way to balloon productions out of control even with Project Genie and a hundred other generative AI models at the helm.

          The more likely end result is that devs will find it so easy to start something that they'll start 100 projects, or try 100 different ideas, but be completely unable to lock on and focus on any one, because there's always a greener grass a single prompt away.

          1 Reply Last reply
          6
          • apeman42@lemmy.worldA apeman42@lemmy.world

            If this is widely adopted, I have enough emulators and classic PC games to never buy another game in my life and still be entertained the whole time. Good luck, corpo dipshits.

            G This user is from outside of this forum
            G This user is from outside of this forum
            Goodeye8
            wrote last edited by
            #14

            This will never be widely accepted in the gaming space because it's not a game. The model only generates an interactive world, not a game world. It's effectively a glorified AI prompted showroom. It's useless as a development tool because nothing it generates is usable in the traditional development process which means the model would have to create the whole game but the model is incapable of understanding what a game is.

            S regrettable_incident@lemmy.worldR W G A 7 Replies Last reply
            125
            • F fecundpossum@lemmy.world

              This. My back log of physical DS and 3ds games is extensive and grows a little every time I remember I have the eBay app on my phone. Sorry wallet.

              D This user is from outside of this forum
              D This user is from outside of this forum
              douchebagmcswag@lemmynsfw.com
              wrote last edited by
              #15

              If can grow more if you know the way of Luma CFW and Twilight Menu ++

              ...., much, much more

              1 Reply Last reply
              2
              • ekZeppE ekZepp

                Yesterday, Google announced Project Genie, a new generative AI tool that can apparently create entire games from just prompts. It leverages the Genie 3 and Gemini models to generate a 60-second interactive world rather than a fully playable one. Despite this, many investors were scared out of their wits, imagining this as the future of game development, resulting in a massive stock sell-off that has sent the share prices of various video game companies plummeting.

                The firms affected by this include Rockstar owner Take-Two Interactive, developer/distributors like CD Projekt Red and Nintendo, along with even Roblox — that one actually makes sense. Most of the games you find on the platform, including the infamous "Steal a Brainrot," are not too far from AI slop, so it's poetic that the product of a neural network is what hurt its stock.

                Unity's share price fell the most at 20%, since it's a popular game engine. Generally speaking, that's how most games operate: they use a software framework, such as Unity or Unreal Engine, which provides basic functionality like physics, rendering, input, and sound. Studios then build their vision on top of these, and some developers even have their own custom in-house solutions, such as Rockstar's RAGE or Guerrilla's Decima.

                G This user is from outside of this forum
                G This user is from outside of this forum
                gegil@sopuli.xyz
                wrote last edited by
                #16

                Investors never played a real video game. They dont undestand the difference between video (ai generated) and a video game.

                B 1 Reply Last reply
                24
                • apeman42@lemmy.worldA apeman42@lemmy.world

                  If this is widely adopted, I have enough emulators and classic PC games to never buy another game in my life and still be entertained the whole time. Good luck, corpo dipshits.

                  F This user is from outside of this forum
                  F This user is from outside of this forum
                  fyrilsol
                  wrote last edited by
                  #17

                  Same. I have spent years building my game libraries just for stupid shit like this.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  2
                  • G Goodeye8

                    This will never be widely accepted in the gaming space because it's not a game. The model only generates an interactive world, not a game world. It's effectively a glorified AI prompted showroom. It's useless as a development tool because nothing it generates is usable in the traditional development process which means the model would have to create the whole game but the model is incapable of understanding what a game is.

                    S This user is from outside of this forum
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                    GreenBottles
                    wrote last edited by
                    #18

                    Its a step in that direction though

                    G 1 Reply Last reply
                    3
                    • G Goodeye8

                      This will never be widely accepted in the gaming space because it's not a game. The model only generates an interactive world, not a game world. It's effectively a glorified AI prompted showroom. It's useless as a development tool because nothing it generates is usable in the traditional development process which means the model would have to create the whole game but the model is incapable of understanding what a game is.

                      regrettable_incident@lemmy.worldR This user is from outside of this forum
                      regrettable_incident@lemmy.worldR This user is from outside of this forum
                      regrettable_incident@lemmy.world
                      wrote last edited by
                      #19

                      That's all it does so far.

                      But I doubt AI games will succeed, people are always going to want the human touch when it comes to art.

                      G U I 3 Replies Last reply
                      14
                      • G Goodeye8

                        This will never be widely accepted in the gaming space because it's not a game. The model only generates an interactive world, not a game world. It's effectively a glorified AI prompted showroom. It's useless as a development tool because nothing it generates is usable in the traditional development process which means the model would have to create the whole game but the model is incapable of understanding what a game is.

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                        W This user is from outside of this forum
                        werecat@lemmy.world
                        wrote last edited by werecat@lemmy.world
                        #20

                        So… it’s as good as Starfield then but without load screens?

                        G 1 Reply Last reply
                        32
                        • ekZeppE ekZepp

                          Yesterday, Google announced Project Genie, a new generative AI tool that can apparently create entire games from just prompts. It leverages the Genie 3 and Gemini models to generate a 60-second interactive world rather than a fully playable one. Despite this, many investors were scared out of their wits, imagining this as the future of game development, resulting in a massive stock sell-off that has sent the share prices of various video game companies plummeting.

                          The firms affected by this include Rockstar owner Take-Two Interactive, developer/distributors like CD Projekt Red and Nintendo, along with even Roblox — that one actually makes sense. Most of the games you find on the platform, including the infamous "Steal a Brainrot," are not too far from AI slop, so it's poetic that the product of a neural network is what hurt its stock.

                          Unity's share price fell the most at 20%, since it's a popular game engine. Generally speaking, that's how most games operate: they use a software framework, such as Unity or Unreal Engine, which provides basic functionality like physics, rendering, input, and sound. Studios then build their vision on top of these, and some developers even have their own custom in-house solutions, such as Rockstar's RAGE or Guerrilla's Decima.

                          BaroqueInMindB This user is from outside of this forum
                          BaroqueInMindB This user is from outside of this forum
                          BaroqueInMind
                          wrote last edited by baroqueinmind@piefed.social
                          #21

                          I tried an in-browser demo of something like this that Microsoft recently took down, and it was an image diffuser running an agent that could contextualize mouse+keyboard or gamepad gameplay inputs to behind-the-hood text prompts.

                          It looked like I was playing a Quake 2 clone, and almost played exactly like it, but weirdly turn-based when I didn't do anything because it was just an AI generating images. It remembered the corpses of the bad guys I shot and it also kinda remembered the environment it made, including ramps that go up another floor and opened doorways that led to other areas.

                          Its cool, but not really a good game, very jank and likely resource intensive, which made sense why they took it down.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          12
                          • ekZeppE ekZepp

                            Yesterday, Google announced Project Genie, a new generative AI tool that can apparently create entire games from just prompts. It leverages the Genie 3 and Gemini models to generate a 60-second interactive world rather than a fully playable one. Despite this, many investors were scared out of their wits, imagining this as the future of game development, resulting in a massive stock sell-off that has sent the share prices of various video game companies plummeting.

                            The firms affected by this include Rockstar owner Take-Two Interactive, developer/distributors like CD Projekt Red and Nintendo, along with even Roblox — that one actually makes sense. Most of the games you find on the platform, including the infamous "Steal a Brainrot," are not too far from AI slop, so it's poetic that the product of a neural network is what hurt its stock.

                            Unity's share price fell the most at 20%, since it's a popular game engine. Generally speaking, that's how most games operate: they use a software framework, such as Unity or Unreal Engine, which provides basic functionality like physics, rendering, input, and sound. Studios then build their vision on top of these, and some developers even have their own custom in-house solutions, such as Rockstar's RAGE or Guerrilla's Decima.

                            thingsiplay@lemmy.mlT This user is from outside of this forum
                            thingsiplay@lemmy.mlT This user is from outside of this forum
                            thingsiplay@lemmy.ml
                            wrote last edited by
                            #22

                            I wonder how bugs are patched or any updates are made to the games. There is no source code either, right? Even if it produces full games, they seem to be worthless and a copy paste at best. Whatever happens in the future, there will always be classic programmers and designers with a vision and talent, who will create wonderful games. And that is even a good selling point.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            4
                            • apeman42@lemmy.worldA apeman42@lemmy.world

                              If this is widely adopted, I have enough emulators and classic PC games to never buy another game in my life and still be entertained the whole time. Good luck, corpo dipshits.

                              thingsiplay@lemmy.mlT This user is from outside of this forum
                              thingsiplay@lemmy.mlT This user is from outside of this forum
                              thingsiplay@lemmy.ml
                              wrote last edited by
                              #23

                              I also have probably emulators for approx. 90 consoles / systems and have full set of games for most... Even if no game is produced anymore, we can buy current gen PC and console games, including Switch and Steam. In addition to emulation of older systems. And then there is the modding scene... with never ending content for out beloved games, even remasters from fans.

                              If the gaming industry goes wild, then I have no fear of missing out. And there are enough games (even to buy) that will serve me for the rest of my life.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • S GreenBottles

                                Its a step in that direction though

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                                Goodeye8
                                wrote last edited by
                                #24

                                There were also steps in the NFT games direction. Steps in some direction doesn't mean those steps will lead to somewhere.

                                S 1 Reply Last reply
                                10
                                • ekZeppE ekZepp

                                  Yesterday, Google announced Project Genie, a new generative AI tool that can apparently create entire games from just prompts. It leverages the Genie 3 and Gemini models to generate a 60-second interactive world rather than a fully playable one. Despite this, many investors were scared out of their wits, imagining this as the future of game development, resulting in a massive stock sell-off that has sent the share prices of various video game companies plummeting.

                                  The firms affected by this include Rockstar owner Take-Two Interactive, developer/distributors like CD Projekt Red and Nintendo, along with even Roblox — that one actually makes sense. Most of the games you find on the platform, including the infamous "Steal a Brainrot," are not too far from AI slop, so it's poetic that the product of a neural network is what hurt its stock.

                                  Unity's share price fell the most at 20%, since it's a popular game engine. Generally speaking, that's how most games operate: they use a software framework, such as Unity or Unreal Engine, which provides basic functionality like physics, rendering, input, and sound. Studios then build their vision on top of these, and some developers even have their own custom in-house solutions, such as Rockstar's RAGE or Guerrilla's Decima.

                                  bananaisaberry@lemmy.zipB This user is from outside of this forum
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                                  bananaisaberry@lemmy.zip
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #25

                                  Genie is pretty cool as it stands from a technical standpoint, but... 1 minute of some really, really bottom tier walking simulator gameplay is not going to destroy the gaming market.

                                  Investors are so easily manipulated.

                                  J T 2 Replies Last reply
                                  49
                                  • G Goodeye8

                                    This will never be widely accepted in the gaming space because it's not a game. The model only generates an interactive world, not a game world. It's effectively a glorified AI prompted showroom. It's useless as a development tool because nothing it generates is usable in the traditional development process which means the model would have to create the whole game but the model is incapable of understanding what a game is.

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                                    ggtdbz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #26

                                    As a dedicated fan of walking simulators I can already see the amount of shovelware we need to dig through to find the good stuff multiplying by orders of magnitude.

                                    It’s been a year since I played INFRA and I’ve thought about it without fail at least once a week and it damn well isn’t because they haphazardly made boring environments.

                                    G 1 Reply Last reply
                                    4
                                    • G Goodeye8

                                      There were also steps in the NFT games direction. Steps in some direction doesn't mean those steps will lead to somewhere.

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                                      GreenBottles
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #27

                                      Very different things.

                                      G 1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • I Cast FistI I Cast Fist

                                        Step 3: market remains irrational, loops back to step 3

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                                        kronarbob@lemmy.world
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #28

                                        So... No profit for me ? I'm sad, but not surprised

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        2
                                        • regrettable_incident@lemmy.worldR regrettable_incident@lemmy.world

                                          That's all it does so far.

                                          But I doubt AI games will succeed, people are always going to want the human touch when it comes to art.

                                          G This user is from outside of this forum
                                          G This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Goodeye8
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #29

                                          That’s all it does so far.

                                          Isn't that the AI hype in a nutshell? "It's all it does right now but if you add insert hopes and dreams it's going to revolutionize X".

                                          I mean, human touch will play a role but I think the tech overall just nowhere near where it should be to make games. It would actually need to understand what it is doing because there needs to be some intentionality there. Something as simple as a counter going up when you kill an enemy, but I think even that goes beyond what current models are even remotely capable. They would be capable of imitating a counter for some timeframe but to actually keep track of it over a long gaming session? I have my doubts.

                                          M 1 Reply Last reply
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