AI copy of indie game Typing Room causes outrage in Japan

An AI-generated version of the work-in-progress indie game Typing Room appeared on Unityroom days after its developer shared early footage. The creator defended the copy as revenge for the original developer's past fangame. Japanese indie developers have expressed concerns over AI content on the platform.

Content creator Kamaboko has been developing Typing Room for about a month and shared its first development video on YouTube on February 26. On March 4, a user named Kamaboko Kōsatsu Kōsatsu uploaded a version titled Typing Room to Unityroom, a platform that hosts games with potential ad revenue support. The upload, as spotted by Automaton, was created using AI prompted by Kamaboko's videos and user manual, taking just two days to produce despite being free-to-play. In a YouTube video responding to plagiarism accusations, Kamaboko Kōsatsu Kōsatsu confirmed using AI for everything and called Kamaboko 'lazy' for taking longer to make games. They justified the copy as revenge, citing Kamaboko's earlier Palworld and Pokémon crossover fangame that used official assets. The incident has sparked backlash among Japanese indie developers on X. Many worry about lax AI content rules on Unityroom, with the rip-off still available. Indie developer Strawberry Sakura wrote, “I’ve come to feel nothing but despair... When you publicize a project at such a rapid stage like I did, or spend too much time on development, it ends up getting stolen like this, huh… I feel anger welling up toward those using generative AI.” Others echoed fears of sharing work-in-progress videos online.

Relaterede artikler

Japan exhibits strong public confidence in AI as a solution to labor shortages, yet workplace adoption remains shallow. While government and corporations push for integration, creators voice concerns over copyrights and income. Experts highlight skill gaps as key barriers.

Rapporteret af AI

Hironobu Sakaguchi, the creator of the Final Fantasy series, has defended his interest in AI-generated video after facing criticism for praising a fan-made trailer for a potential Final Fantasy VI remake.

Recreate Games has cancelled its AI video competition for the multiplayer game Party Animals after facing widespread criticism from players. The studio issued a public apology and ended the contest immediately. The move follows negative feedback received in recent days.

Rapporteret af AI

Developer Pearl Abyss has acknowledged using generative AI tools for early-stage 2D visual props in Crimson Desert, stating they intended to replace them before release. The studio apologised for unintentionally including some in the final version and for lacking transparency. It plans to audit assets and roll out replacements via patches.

Developers of the RPCS3 PlayStation 3 emulator have publicly asked contributors to halt submissions of artificial intelligence generated code to their GitHub repository.

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis