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Long before The Matrix taught Neo kung fu, sci-fi writers speculated about dream injections and downloaded memories. Now some former Uber, Meta, and Creative Assembly devs have brought us one step closer to that reality. Their project? The Atelico AI Engine. Its goal? To put Generative AI in game developers’ hands by reducing its complexity. The result is an AI engine powerful enough to simulate a village of over 20 NPCs, even if you aren’t running the latest hardware. The engine’s dream injection feature even lets you plant new “memories” directly into your NPCs, changing their schedules and personalities instantly. This couldn’t possibly go wrong, right?
Meet the AI of GARP Village
While Meta goes through a troubled evolution of its own, some of its former employees are cooking up a new breed of AI brain. You can see it on full display in the Generative Agents Real-time Playground (GARP), a virtual town with roughly two dozen Atelico AI inhabitants. You can find NPCs behaving in similar ways in dozens of RPGs: following a daily schedule, chatting with their townsfolk, and abiding by a day/night circle. When a dev uses dream injection on an NPC in GARP’s demonstration video, however, that all changes.
After planting a dream about a new hypothetical compound (Freezium), along with the impulse to study it, the dev edits the NPC’s personality directly. With a few keystrokes, the coffee-loving, piano-playing genius loses both of his passions. Now he’s “constantly riffing on famous movie quotes” instead. When the dev checks the chemist’s daily schedule, it includes a note about dinner and “Al Pacino’s ‘I’m gonna make him an offer he can’t refuse’ stir fry.” The awkward phrasing and arbitrary references give away an ongoing weakness. Atelico’s memory might be encyclopedic, but a poet this AI sure isn’t.
AI Antics in Digital Towns
It’s easy to catastrophize, but not all AI is GLaDOS. Giving developers an additional tool at a lower price will probably lead to projects we’d never see otherwise. Unfortunately, at this stage, Atelico’s patchwork dialogue feels more like the sloppy, many-fingered AI portraits that plague Facebook than a leap forward in design. If all you want is that uncanny valley feeling, GARP sometimes delivers. In terms of content that’s fun and meaningful, we might be stuck on a loading screen for a while more.