Indie developers escalate DLSS 5 backlash with Nvidia boycott calls

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.

Speaking to PC Gamer, Oshry said, “Cripple their sales, tank their stock price. Stop collaborating with them as developers. Then maybe they’ll think about going back to giving us what we want.” He likened the pushback to resistance against NFTs, crypto games, microtransactions, loot boxes, and battle passes. On X, Oshry added, “This is more than just experimental bullshit. This is fundamentally changing the way video games look based on artificial intelligence that’s been trained on Instagram models and Epstein memes.” Nvidia has not disclosed DLSS 5's training data and previously described it as generative upscaling at the geometry layer rather than post-processing. Oshry noted that only one New Blood game uses DLSS, calling implementation a “huge pain in the ass,” and framed his stance as that of a concerned PC gamer. He sarcastically remarked, “You used to have to spend hours poorly modding your games to make them look this ‘cinematic’, and now Nvidia is going to let you do it for free! Just kidding, it’ll cost like $5,000.” Szymanski echoed the frustration to PC Gamer, saying the Resident Evil Requiem showcase—praised for its AAA quality—felt like an insult: “Seeing Grace and Leon getting run through the slop filter as a ‘victory lap’ definitely feels like insult and injury combined into one.” He added, “Nobody wants a fucking glorified autocorrect painting over the work of actual human beings making actual art.” Oshry questioned the future of game art: “At this rate, why make game art at all? Why not just draw some shapes and colors and let AI generate what it thinks it should look like?”

관련 기사

Illustration depicting Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announcing DLSS 5 at GTC conference contrasted with gamers' backlash memes and criticism.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Nvidia teases DLSS 5 as gamers express backlash

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Nvidia unveiled DLSS 5 at its GTC conference, calling it the biggest breakthrough in computer graphics, but gamers have reacted with memes and criticism over changes to game visuals. CEO Jensen Huang dismissed the backlash, stating gamers are completely wrong and developers retain artistic control. The technology is set for release in the fall.

Nvidia unveiled DLSS 5, its latest upscaling technology, on Monday, prompting widespread backlash from game developers concerned over alterations to artistic intent. Developers described the AI-enhanced visuals as overriding original game designs, with strong negative reactions shared in interviews and online. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang defended the tech, asserting developers retain full control.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Nvidia has teased DLSS 5, a new real-time neural rendering technology that uses generative AI to enhance lighting and textures in games. The feature has drawn overwhelmingly negative reactions from gamers and developers for producing uncanny, homogenized visuals. Nvidia insists developers retain full artistic control.

Nvidia unveiled NemoClaw for easier OpenClaw AI agent creation, DLSS 5 for advanced gaming graphics, and a new Vera CPU during its GTC 2026 keynote in San Jose. CEO Jensen Huang highlighted agentic AI advancements, comparing OpenClaw to HTML and Linux, while teasing partnerships like Disney robotics and space computing.

AI에 의해 보고됨

At CES 2026, Nvidia announced no new GeForce graphics cards, instead emphasizing software upgrades like DLSS 4.5 and the launch of G-Sync Pulsar monitors. The shift comes amid RAM shortages driven by AI demand, impacting potential mid-generation GPU refreshes. CEO Jensen Huang's keynote prioritized the company's AI business over gaming hardware.

PC game publisher Hooded Horse has implemented a strict ban on generative AI-generated art in all its titles, extending the prohibition to every stage of development. CEO Tim Bender argues that even temporary use of AI assets risks contaminating final builds. This policy aims to safeguard artistic integrity and avoid potential backlash from players.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Steam's February 2026 Next Fest has drawn criticism from players and developers over a flood of demos featuring generative AI art without proper disclosure. Community members are resorting to sorting by popularity to avoid low-quality content, undermining the event's purpose of showcasing indie titles. Valve's disclosure system for AI use appears ineffective, leading to both genuine misuse and false accusations against legitimate creators.

 

 

 

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