How AI Is Revolutionizing Game Development: Insights From Sony's Shuhei Yoshida

Zinger Key Points
  • Sony's Shuhei Yoshida believes AI will assist game developers in producing animations, behaviors and debugging programs.
  • Yoshida emphasizes creativity and talent are still the key to producing unique and engaging games.

Sony Group Corp.'s SONY Sony Interactive Entertainment Chief of Independent Developers Shuhei Yoshida recently shared his perspective on the role of artificial intelligence (AI) in game development.

In an interview with The Guardian, Yoshida revealed he had experiences with AI while scouting for developer talent for PlayStation. He spoke about an indie competition in Japan where one participant created "amazing, beautiful graphics" using Midjourney, an AI art generator.

See Also: Will AI Disrupt Video Games? Someone Just Built Original 'Pong' Game In Less Than 60 Seconds Using GPT-4

The industry veteran and winner of the 2023 BAFTA game awards also believed AI has the potential to assist developers in producing animations, behaviors and debugging programs.

"That is powerful, that a small number of young people can create an amazing-looking game," he said.

Despite concerns AI could replace human effort in areas such as art, music and code, he emphasized AI was merely a tool and someone has to use it.

"AI will change the nature of learning for game developers, but in the end, development will be more efficient and more beautiful things will be made by people. The creativity is more important, the direction, how you envision what you want," Yoshida said.

Video games are a medium that fully embraces technological advancements to create fun and engaging experiences, he noted, adding that he also believed the future of the industry will be defined by talent, not technology or business models.

Yoshida emphasized the importance of supporting and encouraging creative ideas and individuals who work on new things. He expressed his concern that the industry may become repetitive, with the same Top 10 games dominating every year, and that all games may become service games, which would make the industry dull.

“The industry keeps growing and growing, and I hope it keeps supporting and chasing creative ideas and people who try to work on new things. You don’t want to see the Top 10 games every year being almost the same, all games becoming service games… That would be a bit boring, for me,” said the 59-year-old who helped run PlayStation's American studios in the 2000s.

Read Next: The AI Effect: Mark Zuckerberg Set To Change The Game For WhatsApp, Messenger And More​​​​​​​

Photo by Julian Hochgesang on Unsplash

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