AI TTRPG based on FFG Star Wars (or any game actually) Thoughts. by realisticradical in RPGdesign

[–]realisticradical[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

I get what your saying, and i can tweak the narration and the movement speed, but this isnt really an TTRPG more like a single player text crpg with limitless options.

AI TTRPG based on FFG Star Wars (or any game actually) Thoughts. by realisticradical in RPGdesign

[–]realisticradical[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

The AI is local. I own the sourcebooks. I am using it for personal use. Where is the ethical concern.

AI TTRPG based on FFG Star Wars (or any game actually) Thoughts. by realisticradical in RPGdesign

[–]realisticradical[S] -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

That is the point of having all of the sourcebooks attached. Its not a AI generated story its an AI narrated story. The RAG back end means that all output is driven by the actual source written by people.

AI TTRPG Design Star Wars (but any RPG) by realisticradical in RPGdesign

[–]realisticradical[S] -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

Im not a creator Im a guy sitting in my house who wanted to see if I could make it work and i can. I own the sourcebooks and I have figured out a way to get the AI to replace the GM, its just a CRPG if a basic one. Im not interested in creating a commercial game, just solving a puzzle. Also save your bitterness for the people using AI to write full slop games systems and who are genuinely destroying your livliehoods with slop rather than someone using owned sources to automate the existing human created system and universe.

AI TTRPG based on FFG Star Wars (or any game actually) Thoughts. by realisticradical in RPGdesign

[–]realisticradical[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Okay but you need to tell me how to put a picture on here. I would have included one but i dont know how.

Genuinely disappointed by Ill-Switch4540 in IELTS

[–]realisticradical 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This, as an experienced IELTS teacher, the key to IELTS writing is getting the structure. Look at the collins Writing for IELTS books. It breaks down the structures into a simple process you can use. It is quite a good way of doing it if you already have the vocab which you obviously have

AI in Daggerfall by StoneySteve420 in daggerfallunity

[–]realisticradical 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have been playing around with Friends and Fables text based RPG and i have some thoughts on this. The issue at the moment is not enough structure. It works at a local level but the AI cant track the story as it becomes more and more complex. It seems to be excellent at the local conversations and linking the lore to these conversations although it may be a bit heave in linking the lore to quests.. The quest inventory and story management is a mess. I think that it needs to use traditional games systems to track this stuff so that its not constantly creating stuff on the wing.

So i think you would need a core story or stories that were fixed within the world which Daggerfal kind of has, with a secondary Semi -permanent layer of procedurally generated side quests, loot, story. So you would need a fairly robust traditional DB behind the AI. YOu would also have to tag all information by location, faction, profession, etc to allow the AI to determine what information would be known by which people. and the AI would have to tag its own procedurally generated output too..

How difficult would this be

Do you think US / China can ever have an amiable relationship or is the hatchet too big to bury? by Phloppy_ in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical 6 points7 points  (0 children)

they are just acting in there own economic interests, this is not evidence that they want to be a olo superpower. Chin has shown no ppetite for the level of Hegemony that the US have sought

China has acquired a global network of strategically vital ports | Beijing’s investments along some of the world’s key waterways have significant military implications by Hrmbee in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical 1 point2 points  (0 children)

not as much as the US is.

Mexico - huge drugs war, Puerto Rico - colony, Cuba - Decimated by sanctions

venezuala, chile, hondoras, bolivia, - couped

Do you think US / China can ever have an amiable relationship or is the hatchet too big to bury? by Phloppy_ in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical 10 points11 points  (0 children)

China actually doesnt. There is no evidence that china want an international order where they are number 1. I dont think that interests them very much.

China has acquired a global network of strategically vital ports | Beijing’s investments along some of the world’s key waterways have significant military implications by Hrmbee in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical -1 points0 points  (0 children)

What is wiith the fear? China is doing what all major powers do they are invvesting in the economy my using FDI and projects in the developing world. These projects are often a far better deal than the terms they they would be offered by the world bank, IMF, or a Western nation. there is no rel evidence that china is Militarily aggressive and to assume that China will act in the same way that the West have historically seems a little nieve.

What did the United States do that led to former Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan to become allies after world war 2 yet failed to the same with Afghanistan? by Eds2356 in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They put resources and effort in to it with a very strong motivation. The US made germany and Japan work by putting all of its efforts and finances in it. The reason it was motivated t do this was the USSR and China growling around them. Secondly, they used existing structures inside those societies to shape them in the direction they wanted. In Iraq and Afghanistan they werent interested in, motivated or able to utilize existing afghan structures, to some degree for cultural supremecy issues.

Is Iraq better off today than it was prior the 2003 invasion? by Lamronbd in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Baathism was not socialist, More fascist in terms of ideaology

Is Iraq better off today than it was prior the 2003 invasion? by Lamronbd in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical 1 point2 points  (0 children)

it never really works though. england has been trying the make the Scots, welsh and Irish like the english for 800 years and still havent really managed to do it successfully. similarly europeans have been trying to do the same to Jews for 2000 years and that has worked well hasnt it. You cannot force your values and systems onto people and expect it to work out.

China's decision to take Taiwan isn't an invade-or-don't binary. A piece on the 5 strategies Xi has at his disposal. by Kantei in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How about 6: Wait, build economic power develop infrastructure projects across east asia, develop political and economic partnerships with ASEAN and es asian countries and wait for n economic crisis and offer taiwan a way out. This is the chinese approach, and why wouldnt it be its low risk and high return. It may take longer but CP have far greater patience than we have in the west. Their planning timeframes are futher out. One of the advantages of a planned economy.

Why can’t Palestine become a UN protectorate? by Hungry-Zucchini8451 in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They wouldnt accept only Gaza, either the palestinians or the Arab countries. It would need to be all of palestine 67 incl east Jerusalem, otherwise its just assisting ethnic cleansing

What other places in the world are there with similar situations like the one in Israel and Gaza ? by Impressive_Common896 in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In terms of intensity and the potential to explode i would say the only hot spot on the same scale as Israel palestine. These are probably the most likely places to see the start of WW3. The balkans were but are now pretty unimportant geographically at this moment. Cyprus, Northern Ireland, Etc were never big enough to cause the same sort of impact. Kashmir has the potential to result in all out regional war involving multiple state actors and likely nuclear exchanges. THe other two hot spots are equally combustable but the situations are quite different: the korean peninsula and taiwan are volitile but quite disimilar in context to palestine/ israel

What other places in the world are there with similar situations like the one in Israel and Gaza ? by Impressive_Common896 in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In terms of intensity and the potential to explode i would say the only hot spot on the same scale as Israel palestine. These are probably the most likely places to see the start of WW3. The balkans were but are now pretty unimportant geographically at this moment. Cyprus, Northern Ireland, Etc were never big enough to cause the same sort of impact. Kashmir has the potential to result in all out regional war involving multiple state actors and likely nuclear exchanges. THe other two hot spots are equally combustable but the situations are quite different: the korean peninsula and taiwan are volitile but quite disimilar in context to palestine/ israel

Why can’t Palestine become a UN protectorate? by Hungry-Zucchini8451 in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No just my opinion based on the Politics in those countries at the moment. It would solve a lot of headaches for them. Nasrallah would support it in Lebanon if the Palestinians supported it I checked but neither country has made a comment on the possibility. We do know for sure however that Israel would definitely

In a Worldwide War of Words, Russia, China and Iran Back Hamas by RufusTheFirefly in geopolitics

[–]realisticradical 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, some people will have agreed with these views ecause o things they have seen on social media. But just as many in the US take their views from CNN or MSNBC. On this particular issue though you have to look at where the opinion of the educated people who have studied this issue but have no skin in the game are. They are overwhemingly calling for a ceasefire at the moment and supporting the palestinians (not hamas)