Skip to main content

This new AI application could change game development forever

AI animations running on a laptop.
Luke Larsen / Digital Trends

Singapore-based game developer Winking Studios announced its new GenMotion.AI application in Berlin during Acer’s IFA 2024 press conference on Wednesday. The generative AI will enable game designers and animators to create high-quality animations with natural language text prompts.

“GenMotion.AI streamlines the creation process of detailed 3D art with its advanced customization features tailored to meet specific animation requirements,” the company wrote in Wednesday’s press release. It added that future updates will make it “accessible to both seasoned professionals and amateur creators.”

Recommended Videos

Winking Studios is an appropriate developer for creating such a tool, as it is already a game art outsourcing company, having worked with companies like Activision, Ubisoft, and Square Enix. These partner developers would likely have to approve the use of such a technology in game, but in theory, it seems like it could be implemented in a subtler — and more useful — way.

Details are still largely scarce regarding how GenMotion actually works, however, the company notes that it is “powered by high-quality training data” and “crafted with a deep insight into animator workflows and requirements” to ensure that the AI can integrate seamlessly into existing processes. That’s important, as this kind of stuff won’t be remotely useful if it doesn’t consider how developers currently create games.

The company is also quick to point out that the training data is copyright-protected, and that its entire capture process is recorded on video and “meticulously documented on the blockchain.” Winking Studios goes so far as to claim that an unnamed, but “renowned” law firm has audited the workflow to “ensure security and compliance” with international law.

The tool is currently in beta release, and you can try it out for yourself on the GenMotion.AI website.

Generative AI animation tools have rapidly grown in popularity over the past few years, led by applications such as Adobe Character Animator, Blender, and DeepMotion, though the industry’s biggest studios have been reticent to incorporate the technology into major product releases.

Nvidia, for example, has been testing its ACE technology to generate fully interactive non-playable characters, including their dialogue and facial expression,s but has had to implement a NeMo Guardrails tool for developers to prevent the NPCs’ responses from going too far off the rails.

Ubisoft showed off a similar NPC creator at GDC 2024 that players can interact with using their headset’s microphone, however, there are no firm plans as of yet to roll the feature out to a AAA title. We’ll have to see if GenMotion.AI has a bit more success in attracting support from developers.

Andrew Tarantola
Andrew Tarantola is a journalist with more than a decade reporting on emerging technologies ranging from robotics and machine…
Westinghouse’s new nuclear microreactor could power tomorrow’s AI data centers
the eVinci microreactor

Westinghouse Electric has submitted its Preliminary Safety Design Report (PSDR) for the eVinci Microreactor to the National Reactor Innovation Center (NRIC) at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), a major milestone in a process that began last October.

America largely abandoned nuclear energy after the Three Mile Island disaster in 1979, but it is making a comeback thanks to the astronomical energy (and cooling) requirements of today's frontier AI models. A recent study by the Washington Post and The University of California, Davis, found that using ChatGPT to generate a single 100-word email can consume up to nearly a liter and a half of water and enough energy to power 14 LED light bulbs for an hour. And as AI models grow ever larger and more complex, their power demands are expected to increase in step, with AI data centers consuming multiple megawatts up to a full gigawatt of electricity.

Read more
Sorry, Microsoft — AI isn’t the reason people are buying new laptops
Asus Vivobook S 15 CoPilot+ front angled view showing display and keyboard.

New research by the International Data Corporation (IDC) shows that although AI PCs are selling well and will likely continue to, it's not the onboard generative AI that's driving sales -- it's just the usual refresh cycle.

Companies like Microsoft are aggressively pushing the advantages of generative AI for the average consumer's workflow, but the IDC thinks customers aren't responding to the AI features specifically. People need new PCs on a regular basis -- which we call a refresh cycle -- and since so many of the laptops launching this year are AI PCs, the consumers who need upgrades are naturally just buying what's available.

Read more
ChatGPT: the latest news and updates on the AI chatbot that changed everything
ChatGPT app running on an iPhone.

In the ever-evolving landscape of artificial intelligence, ChatGPT stands out as a groundbreaking development that has captured global attention. From its impressive capabilities and recent advancements to the heated debates surrounding its ethical implications, ChatGPT continues to make headlines.

Whether you're a tech enthusiast or just curious about the future of AI, dive into this comprehensive guide to uncover everything you need to know about this revolutionary AI tool.
What is ChatGPT?
ChatGPT (which stands for Chat Generative Pre-trained Transformer) is an AI chatbot, meaning you can ask it a question using natural language prompts and it will generate a reply. Unlike less-sophisticated voice assistant like Siri or Google Assistant, ChatGPT is driven by a large language model (LLM). These neural networks are trained on huge quantities of information from the internet for deep learning — meaning they generate altogether new responses, rather than just regurgitating canned answers. They're not built for a specific purpose like chatbots of the past — and they're a whole lot smarter. The current version of ChatGPT is based on the GPT-4 model, which was trained on all sorts of written content including websites, books, social media, news articles, and more — all fine-tuned in the language model by both supervised learning and RLHF (Reinforcement Learning From Human Feedback).
When was ChatGPT released?
OpenAI released ChatGPT in November 2022. When it launched, the initial version of ChatGPT ran atop the GPT-3.5 model. In the years since, the system has undergone a number of iterative advancements with the current version of ChatGPT using the GPT-4 model family. GPT-5 is reportedly just around the corner. GPT-3 was first launched in 2020, GPT-2 released the year prior to that, though neither were used in the public-facing ChatGPT system.
Upon its release, ChatGPT's popularity skyrocketed literally overnight. It grew to host over 100 million users in its first two months, making it the most quickly-adopted piece of software ever made to date, though this record has since been beaten by the Twitter alternative, Threads. ChatGPT's popularity dropped briefly in June 2023, reportedly losing 10% of global users, but has since continued to grow exponentially.
How to use ChatGPT
First, go to chatgpt.com. If you'd like to maintain a history of your previous chats, sign up for a free account. You can use the system anonymously without a login if you prefer. Users can opt to connect their ChatGPT login with that of their Google-, Microsoft- or Apple-backed accounts as well. At the sign up screen, you'll see some basic rules about ChatGPT, including potential errors in data, how OpenAI collects data, and how users can submit feedback. If you want to get started, we have a roundup of the best ChatGPT tips.

Read more