Tim Sweeney claims it’s a “Scarlet Letter” which makes players “try to kill the game”

Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney has criticised rival Valve for forcing studios to disclose when they use AI in game development.

Epic recently showed how it was integrating AI into Unreal Engine 6.

Time Sweeney said:

“If you want to launch a game, and get it as widely publicized as possible, you’ve got to put it on Steam so people can wish list it, and if you want to play it on Steam, then you have to get this Scarlet Letter of AI attached to your product, and now there is a hater community trying to kill the game.

“I think it’s really irresponsible of Valve. They shouldn’t do it, because it makes it much, much, much harder for a game developer to have a chance of success. You have to choose from either not using tools that can make you way more productive, and probably failing due to competition that does.”

Which is totally ignoring the factor that the user should know about the purchase it makes and be able to decide for themselves. Transparency for the player is not a bad thing.

  • unwarlikeExtortion@lemmy.ml
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    14 days ago

    If what Steam does is such a problem for everyone involved, why doesn’t Sweeny make a better product himself then?

    Oh, he has but it’s worse?

    Whould’ve thought!

    • thingsiplay@lemmy.mlOP
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      14 days ago

      Remember when Epic Games Store launched and Tim defended the barebones functionality and quality, in comparison to how Steam launched barebones back then? That was his justification. Having real competition is a good thing, but it has to be a competition, not exclusivity. GOG does a good job and providing value.

      • ZkhqrD5o@lemmy.world
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        14 days ago

        Epic lacked a search bar and a shopping basket for months after launch. He compared his 2018 product with a 2003 product and still lost.

  • dogs0n@sh.itjust.works
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    14 days ago

    His last “point” doesn’t make any sense.

    You have to choose from either not using tools that can make you way more productive, and probably failing due to competition that does.

    If “you’ve got to put it on Steam” and Steam tells you whether a game used AI or not, then everyone is on the same playing field.

    That means if you think your game will fail because everyone is boycotting AI games, you are free to not use AI… and you won’t “probably fail due to competition that does,” because their games are also on Steam!

    Hope I am explaining what that sounds like to me (a contradiction of his whole statement).

    Also he can go to hell. Gaming is being kept alive by Steam and It’s always little timmy trying to tear it down with his shitty manipulations. Why doesn’t he buck up his ideas and go make an actual competitor to Steam?

  • sunbytes@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    God forbid we give consumers the ability to make informed decisions.

    Fellas, is it woke to vote with your wallet?

  • Don_alForno@feddit.org
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    14 days ago

    Tim Sweeney claims it’s a “Scarlet Letter” which makes players “try to kill the game”

    That’s because we don’t want slop in our media, and we have a right to not want it.

    What this shithead is saying is that customers should be lied to so they can’t choose a product based on what they actually want.

  • d-RLY?@lemmy.ml
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    14 days ago

    While I think I understand what he means with regards to catching hate for being marked “AI”. I think it should be marked, but give a scale of sorts. Then it is easier for people to decide what things they are “okay” with vs what they aren’t. Like “AI voice over” is different than a game done “Mostly/completely AI”. Which would also help the random people that really like AI to find games using it (obviously that crowd is niche).

    Maybe allow marking in detail elements that are AI place holders for Early Access games, where the dev is a small team or single person (no excuse for AAA games with huge budgets). The context matters, and people that don’t want any AI would already be leaving really bad reviews when they find out AI was used at all (along with demanding refunds). Could even be good for those Early Access games to find people to work with in replacing the place holders if people see things are still needed and reach out.

    Would also be good if the same kind of scale markers could be applied to games that don’t use AI but do use pre-made assets. Not like AI is the only cause for all the slop games.

  • nonentity@sh.itjust.works
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    14 days ago

    If you’re proud of your use, it’s a non-issue, if you’re ashamed of it, why are you using it?

    Transparency is only ever an issue when concealment and deceit are core elements of the activity.

  • floquant@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    15 days ago

    I don’t get it, if AI is so great and the future, wouldn’t you be happy to disclose your use of it in your product?