Developers share placeholder art after Crimson Desert AI controversy

Pearl Abyss confirmed that AI-generated images in Crimson Desert were unintended placeholders that slipped into the final launch. In response, numerous game developers have shared their own deliberately silly human-made temporary assets on social media. The incident highlights differing views on what placeholder art should look like during development.

Crimson Desert, an open-world RPG from Pearl Abyss, launched last week but faced backlash over in-game paintings that appeared AI-generated, such as horses with extra legs. On March 22, 2026, the developer and publisher acknowledged the assets, stating they were used early in production to 'rapidly explore tone and atmosphere' and were meant to be replaced before release. Some images, however, remained in the shipped game, prompting skepticism from the industry. Pearl Abyss described it as an oversight, a claim echoed by other studios in similar past cases but met with doubt from developers familiar with standard practices. They argue that effective placeholders must be 'obnoxiously temporary' to avoid accidental inclusion. Obsidian Entertainment's design director Josh Sawyer, known for Fallout: New Vegas and Pentiment (2022), exemplified this by posting images from Pentiment, including an upside-down Bambi and an MS Paint drawing reading 'Guy Sux.' He tweeted: 'Placeholder assets in a game should look obnoxiously temporary, so obvious that no one would mistake it for the final asset. If you use a temp asset that seems passable, it may stay there.' Other developers followed suit on March 22 and 23, sharing MS Paint doodles, meme images, bright pink models, and absurd sketches like a 'placeholder fish man,' crayon textures, and a frog on note paper. Examples came from studios and independents working on titles like The Spirit Lift, Indigo Park, 35 Electric, and Beaconing. This wave of posts underscores a consensus that human-made, intentionally crude assets better signal the need for replacement than AI-generated ones that might blend in.

관련 기사

Illustration depicting Crimson Desert's 2 million sales success amid launch glitches and mixed reviews, with a warrior carrying a cat in a desert scene overlaid with Steam stats.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Crimson Desert sells 2 million copies amid launch issues and mixed reviews

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Pearl Abyss' Crimson Desert has sold 2 million copies since its March 20, 2026 release, achieving a peak of 240,000 concurrent Steam players. However, players report clunky controls, technical glitches, and suspected AI art, leading to Mixed Steam reviews. The developer promises improvements while players praise features like carrying cats.

Fans of Pearl Abyss's Crimson Desert have identified what they believe are signs of AI-generated artwork in the game, amid ongoing launch issues. Images show anomalies like missing fingers and human bodies merging with horses. Some also suspect AI-handled translations.

AI에 의해 보고됨

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.

One week after Nvidia's DLSS 5 reveal sparked widespread developer criticism for using generative AI to alter game visuals and override artistic intent, indie figures are now urging a boycott. Dave Oshry, CEO of New Blood Interactive, called on gamers and developers to cripple Nvidia's sales and stock price, while Dusk developer David Szymanski decried its showcase in Resident Evil Requiem.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Capcom has stated it will not include AI-generated materials in its game content, as revealed in an investor briefing on March 23, 2026. The company plans to use AI tools to improve efficiency in development processes like graphics, sound, and programming. This comes amid backlash over Nvidia's DLSS 5 implementation in Resident Evil Requiem.

Developer Pearl Abyss updated the Steam page for Crimson Desert to include Denuvo DRM on March 12, just days before the game's March 19 launch. The change has sparked backlash among PC players concerned about potential performance issues. The game has already surpassed 3 million wishlists.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Christofer Sundberg, co-founder of Avalanche Studios, stated that the studio's canceled 2009 game AionGuard featured elements similar to those in Crimson Desert. In a recent PC Gamer interview, Sundberg expressed lasting resentment toward the publisher that ended the project via text message. The open-world fantasy title never progressed beyond low-resolution screenshots after its early announcement.

 

 

 

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