Same. Hollow Knight’s combat and platforming simply didn’t click. But, the atmosphere of that game is simply impeccable. That, to me, makes Hollow Knight an amazing video game, just one not for me.
All I ask is in what way are LLMs progress. Ability to generate a lot of slop is pretty much only thing LLMs are good for. Even that is not really cheap, especially factoring the environmental costs.
Where is the idea that LLMs will ever to curing diseases coming from? What is the possible mechanism? LLMs generate text from probability distributions. There is no reason to trust their output because they don’t have built-in concept of true or false. When one cannot judge the quality of the output, how can one reliably use it as a tool for any purpose, let alone scientific research?
I am not implying that transformers-based models have to be huge to be useful. I am only talking about LLMs. I am questioning the purported goal of LLMs, i.e., to replace all humans in as many creative fields as possible, in the context of it’s cost, both environmental and social.
Hollow Knight: Silksong Will Release for Only $20, Release Times Revealed (bsky.app) angielski
Four days until release! Hollow Knight: Silksong will be available on 4th September....
AI was a common theme at Gamescom 2025, and while some indie teams say it's invaluable, it remains an ethical nightmare (www.eurogamer.net) angielski
Atari has acquired five Ubisoft games, including Child of Eden and Grow Home, and will re-release and ‘evolve’ them | VGC (www.videogameschronicle.com) angielski
It would be nice to see some more IPs liberated from Ubisoft, since they’re not using them anyway.