I Played the AI Version of ‘Quake II,’ and Here's How It Went ...0

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We've seen examples of this over the past year or so. Google's Genie model, for example, aims to generate playable video game environments from user prompts. Earlier this year, Microsoft unveiled a similar AI model, called Muse, and that model's first mainstream experience is now here: The company is offering an experimental version of Quake II, a game originally released in 1997, that is powered by AI.

What it's like to play AI Quake

When you first load up the "Copilot Gaming Experience," you agree to a popup warning you the game is rated M and that you are indeed 18 years or older—even though M-rated games are supposed to be 17 and up. Consider this your first warning that something is off.

The game loads in a small window in the center of the screen. Immediately, you can tell it's not quite right. Sure, it's recognizably a video game: It's from a first-person perspective, with an animated hand holding a pistol in the bottom-right. You have a health bar, an ammo counter, and a weapon indicator. You can recognize that you are in a room, with clearly-defined (yet blocky) features. However, something about the entire experience just feels wrong, and the effect worsens as soon as you press a button.

Credit: Lifehacker

The game plays a bit like SuperHot, in that when you stop moving, nothing happens. Enemies don't attack, and in fact just freeze up entirely. It's only when you take an action that you'll notice things change on the screen: A monster may move, shape-shift (due to the AI, not a Quake gameplay mechanic) or attack, or perhaps the room itself will change entirely. You can look at the floor, spin around in a circle two or three times, then look up, and find yourself in another corner of the map.

Sometimes, you run into a room and encounter an enemy, firing away. But if you run past it, then turn around, it'll be gone. You don't even need it to exit your field of vision: By just strafing from left to right to "dodge" its attacks, I watched one enemy "fall apart" onto the floor, as if I was using the moving ground to erase the monster.

Game-breaking bugs

The game can simply break on a moment's notice. On one run, I was about to enter hallway, decided to do a 360-scan of the room before I did, and when I made it all the way around, the hallway had turned into an elevator. When I walked up to the elevator button, I triggered a loading screen that never finished loading.

Another time, I looked down, spun around, and looked back up to find myself in another room entirely. As I stepped around, I was suddenly losing health, but there was no attacker in sight—at least, not one I could see. Just as I was about to fire around the room at random, the game paused and never came back to, similar to the event in the elevator. If the game doesn't freeze on its own, the site will time you out, forcing you to start a new game if you want to continue playing.

Credit: Lifehacker

Should video games be fun?

I'm not so sure I agree. For one, this Quake experience isn't fun. There's no objective or challenge, other than to see how long you can go without breaking the experience. You can kill enemies, sure, but they can't kill you. In fact, the AI generation may get to the enemy before they can get to you, if you simply move the wrong way.

That's not to say there aren't potential, practical uses for AI in game development—but we should be looking at those as tools to add to a game developer's workflow, and not something that makes that developer obsolete. If this is the current state of AI-generated video games, however, flesh and blood game probably developers aren't going anywhere anytime soon.

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