Recreate Games cancela el concurso de vídeos con IA para Party Animals

Recreate Games ha cancelado su concurso de vídeos con IA para el juego multijugador Party Animals tras enfrentarse a críticas generalizadas por parte de los jugadores. El estudio emitió una disculpa pública y finalizó el concurso de inmediato. La medida se produce tras los comentarios negativos recibidos en los últimos días.

Recreate Games anunció ayer la cancelación en X. El estudio explicó que su objetivo inicial era promover la expresión creativa y facilitar la participación a los seguidores de Party Animals. Sin embargo, los desarrolladores reconocieron que vincular este objetivo al uso de la IA fue un error que pasó por alto los posibles perjuicios en medio de los debates actuales sobre esta tecnología.

Artículos relacionados

Dramatic illustration depicting OpenAI executives announcing the shutdown of Sora video app, dissolving Disney partnership, and pivot to robotics and business tools.
Imagen generada por IA

OpenAI shuts down Sora video app and API

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

OpenAI announced on March 24, 2026, that it is discontinuing its Sora AI video generation app and related API, redirecting efforts toward business tools and robotics research. The decision, first reported by The Wall Street Journal, also unravels a $1 billion partnership with Disney. Company executives cited a need to avoid distractions from core productivity applications.

Recreate Games has apologized after its AI video contest for Party Animals drew strong criticism from the community. The studio offered a $75,000 prize pool for AI-generated short films and animations but faced accusations of sidelining human creators. It now asks players to vote on next steps.

Reportado por IA

As the Academy tightens rules to bar AI-generated works from the 99th Oscars, major gaming awards like the Game Awards and BAFTAs have adopted far softer stances on AI, requiring disclosure in some cases but not outright bans.

Pearl Abyss apologized for including undisclosed AI-generated art in Crimson Desert. Former Blizzard co-president Mike Ybarra publicly urged the studio not to apologize, arguing AI is inevitable in games. His comments drew backlash from fans.

Reportado por IA

Game developer Glen Schofield, known for Dead Space, stated that AI will not replace human talent in game development but encouraged artists to learn the technology now. He highlighted the need for nuance in creation that current AI lacks. Schofield shared these views in a conversation with GamesIndustry.biz.

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar