InXile Entertainmentās next game is the first-person steampunk RPG Clockwork Revolution. Studio founder Brian Fargo, whoās leading the project, recently sat down with YouTuber MrMattyPlays for a deep-dive interview about his long career and his take on current hot topics in the video game industry like generative AI and LLM technology, which the Xbox studioās parent company is currently investing $80 billion in. Has InXile embraced it in a similar fashion? āFor certain things, but but Iām very keen to what are the ethical uses of it?ā he said. āI am worried about job loss.ā
Fargo, whose career in games dates back to the 1980s when he worked on influential role-playing games likeĀ The Bardās TaleĀ andĀ Wasteland, laid out a couple of different use cases he foresees for tools like ChatGPT, but distinguished them from things like using generative AI to plagiarize the creative output of other artists. āThese gamesā¦weāre close to about the same word count as the Bible, basically, and so thatās a lot of data no human can get in in its head,ā he said. āSo would I like an LLM to be able to query: āHow many times did [inaudible] talk?ā āHow many times have we used this skill?ā Like thereās some things that I would want to query the information to make sure so I see that.ā
The veteran studio head said he also uses generative AI for inspiration they way he might visit a museum or scroll through peopleās Deviant Art pages, but that only commissioned work is used in the actual production process. Other uses Fargo pointed to were cleaning up motion capture footage and potentially voicing quick pickup lines added to a game at the last minute if the actor agrees to it and is paid extra but is otherwise unable to make it into the studio. That part sounds in line with what SAG-AFTRA members settled on in a new contract after months on strike.