
"Looking at some of this artwork, including in-game player banners, I notice the telltale signs of AI imagery, including at least one cartoon character that appears to have six fingers. Eyelines also don't match up, and some objects seem vaguely defined. And almost all of it just looks really bland. Keep in mind, these are rewards you get for completing challenges, which makes it even more depressing; gee, thanks, some machine-vomited "art.""
"Other players have shared screenshots of what looks like AI-generated artwork within Black Ops 7's campaign, which this year is online-only and designed around multiplayer. Of course, we can't know for sure which pieces of art in the latest Call of Duty were created by humans, which were generated by a machine, and which are a combo, with humans touching up crappy generated imagery."
Black Ops 7 launched on November 14 and players quickly shared in-game screenshots showing suspected AI-generated artwork in player banners and campaign assets. Images show telltale AI artifacts such as six-fingered cartoon characters, mismatched eyelines, vaguely defined objects, and generally bland composition. Many of the questionable images appear as rewards for completing challenges, fueling player disappointment. The game's Steam store page discloses use of generative AI tools to develop some in-game assets. The publisher acknowledged using a variety of digital and AI tools to support teams in creating game experiences. The mix of AI and human touch-ups remains unclear.
Read at Kotaku
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