![]() ![]() I sure GPT will eventually be better at it than humans, but for now, having a human veto is necessary to have a good noise/signal ratio and because GPT is "good enough", being lazy is tempting.īut yeah, I can confirm GPT4 is already quite good at it and will only improve from this point. It's not just about producing a lot, it's what you don't put in the game, and what you do to glue things together. When you think of the content of the books in Baldur's Gate and the sheer amount of human hours poured into something just to give background to the game, this is going to save indeed a lot of time.īut on the other hand, just like open world was a terrible curse with hundred of games feeling empty, I'm afraid we will see a wave of games with a lot of generated but eventually uninteresting content because this is so easy to do.Īfter all, good content is coherent, and filtered. You cannot just substitute one man's imagination for the missing science of AI reasoning. The entirety of science is an effort to produce word-based imaginary systems and processes, whose outcomes match the outcomes in reality. The consequences of an action in a person's imagination rarely match the consequences in reality. The part that irks me is that people even consider using them at all. So broadly I am agreeing with you - AI should follow laws that are more rich than Asimov's made up universe. Asimov's laws should have no bearing on AI in reality except to inform people to do something different. They are as much a manual as "1984" is, that is - not at all. The laws are designed to produce interesting fiction, not to be a template to follow in real life. First and foremost he designed his laws so conflict was inevitable. This comes up every time AI is mentioned and I feel like people are drawing entirely the wrong conclusion from Asimov. But some sort of prompt engineering will eventually prove necessary i think. Overall for a DM with infinite patience and an entirely customizable campaign on the fly with no need to plan/recover it seems promising at first. It forgot I had agonizing blast after a few hours. ![]() After a few hours it started confusing classes in my party (I think there is some context window). Adapted well on the fly to unusual character behavior (guessing an unreasonable answer for a puzzle solution). Used puzzles and challenges and created a sense of danger. Added elements on the fly consistently without losing track mostly The first 20 rolls were all greater than 10, asked it give more random rolls and it seemingly did for a while ![]() Performed combat rolls and math, all apparently correctly for a long while Had to ask it to only tell 5 paragraphs at a time Was an outstanding writer, far better than any DM in terms of sensory descriptions and articulation Was able to add a cat to the game upon request Created character sheet for me, at desired level with spells and abilities Played a solo-campgain with GPT4 for 1-2 hours yesterday, summary: ![]()
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