The last 3 (I believe I missed some due to possibly coming in late and I got the purple screen of death when using ad blocking Chrome attachments. If anyone has any other screenshots that I missed, please add them.)
The older neural network cards are more fun because they are mostly gibberish. The better the networks have gotten the more the cards become just magic cards with badly costed abilities.
I do think this is a neat way to draw inspiration if you're tapped out.
By itself, it certainly lacks the human touch, and doesn't understand what makes the game fun for both players.
This being interactivity (give and take), coherence, and force majeure (to name the top). I doubt if an AI could everything get right, this is too multifacted so that even humans with lots of experience need the human touch of cross-reference to hone at least some of their content.
Monstrosity 27 Homarid Thrull might be the best thing I've seen in awhile.
And it can only be played in a Mardu commander deck *face palm*
What is really throwing off is where it got the self-made art? Did the AI scour the web? Did it scan current art and make Frankenstein art? One thing's for sure, if they made the art NFT's and sold them for charity, they'll get bookoo bucks.
Monstrosity 27 Homarid Thrull might be the best thing I've seen in awhile.
And it can only be played in a Mardu commander deck *face palm*
What is really throwing off is where it got the self-made art? Did the AI scour the web? Did it scan current art and make Frankenstein art? One thing's for sure, if they made the art NFT's and sold them for charity, they'll get bookoo bucks.
They look like they were AI generated probably based on some search criteria. The more I look at the art, the weirder it gets.
Monstrosity 27 Homarid Thrull might be the best thing I've seen in awhile.
And it can only be played in a Mardu commander deck *face palm*
What is really throwing off is where it got the self-made art? Did the AI scour the web? Did it scan current art and make Frankenstein art? One thing's for sure, if they made the art NFT's and sold them for charity, they'll get bookoo bucks.
They look like they were AI generated probably based on some search criteria. The more I look at the art, the weirder it gets.
These systems work by uploading the entire oracle database into the system and then letting it extrapolate designs from that database. Typically it will create a round of designs and then the output will be fedback into the system with (basically) good-or-bad feedback from the programmer and then the system will produce another round of output based on that and repeat the process. The more iterations, the more like real magic cards they start to look.
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To say the least, they are silly, whimsical, absurd, confusing, and really hilarious.
This is going on all weekend with streaming on their website and through Twitch. There are giveaways, and a lot of Magic giveaways.
The website is desertbus.org
Tell me what you think of them!!!
It takes a lot of cherry picking, but some AI generated cards are great designs.
Low-power cube enthusiast!
My 1570 card cube (no longer updated)
My 415 Peasant+ Artifact and Enchantment Cube
Ever-Expanding "Just throw it in" cube.
By itself, it certainly lacks the human touch, and doesn't understand what makes the game fun for both players.
This being interactivity (give and take), coherence, and force majeure (to name the top). I doubt if an AI could everything get right, this is too multifacted so that even humans with lots of experience need the human touch of cross-reference to hone at least some of their content.
And it can only be played in a Mardu commander deck *face palm*
What is really throwing off is where it got the self-made art? Did the AI scour the web? Did it scan current art and make Frankenstein art? One thing's for sure, if they made the art NFT's and sold them for charity, they'll get bookoo bucks.
They look like they were AI generated probably based on some search criteria. The more I look at the art, the weirder it gets.
These systems work by uploading the entire oracle database into the system and then letting it extrapolate designs from that database. Typically it will create a round of designs and then the output will be fedback into the system with (basically) good-or-bad feedback from the programmer and then the system will produce another round of output based on that and repeat the process. The more iterations, the more like real magic cards they start to look.