We all have Watch 365 Days Onlineto look a little harder for reasons to celebrate in this dark year of 2020, but here's a good one: On May 22, Pac-Manturns 40.
The first video game to really catch the attention of a global audience came to Japanese and American arcades in 1980. The round, yellow hero's pellet-chomping, ghost-dodging ways immediately felt like a technological marvel. But now, the same feat of computer programming that seemed so complex way back when has been rebuilt from the ground up – by a thinking computer.
That creation, the AI that built its own Pac-Man, is the product of Nvidia's research team. The Nvidia GameGAN, as it's called, learned everything it could about the classic arcade game over the course of 50,000 "episodes," or play sessions, in which it monitored key presses and on-screen behaviors to glean an understanding of Pac-Man's ground rules.
Armed with that knowledge, the AI then set to work on building a Pac-Manof its own. This isn't so much a remake as it is a completely new creation, crafted by a neural network that was trained over a period of four days to understand the fundamentals of how the original game works.
(The in-game footage you see above appears a little choppy, but Nvidia tells us GameGAN's Pac-Manruns smoothly.)
The particulars of how this all came together gets a little technical, so bear with me. The "GAN" in GameGAN is an acronym for "generative adversarial network." In short, a GAN is actually two neural networks working at cross-purposes (hence, the "adversarial") toward the shared goal of learning enough about a thing to create a convincingly real version of it. Not a carbon copy, mind you, but something that could pass itself off as a real, if different, thing.
You're probably familiar with GAN creations even if you don't realize it. You've surely read about or seen deepfakes, those partially or wholly faked videos that can change the faces and/or voices of speakers in modified videos. Well, GANs are the underlying AI technology that allow for the creation of deepfakes.
Instead of sticking Donald Trump's face on a toddler's body or inserting Tom Holland into Back to the Future, Nvidia's GameGAN played and learned Pac-Man. It then used the information that was gleaned to build something wholly new.
"It learned the rules of Pac-Man.This artificial intelligence learned that Pac-Man can move around this maze. ... It learned that the ghosts move in a particular way, and that when Pac-Man eats one of the power pellets the ghosts turn blue. And it learned what happens when a ghost touches Pac-Man," Nvidia's Rev Lebaredian, vice president of simulation technology, told Mashable.
"It learned all of this without having any concept of how the game mechanics work in the code. It observed it just like a human might."
GameGAN then used the knowledge it amassed to make a new Pac-Man. Having developed an understanding of both the mechanics and design, the AI is able to generate wholly new maze layouts. I haven't seen the finished product outside of the above trailer, but I'll be trying it alongside everyone else when Nvidia releases GameGAN's Pac-Manlater in 2020, potentially over the summer.
SEE ALSO: Celebrate Pac-Man's 40th birthday with a 10-hour loop of his theme songOf course, Pac-Manis just an experiment, proof that this technology works well enough to create a convincing offshoot of the thing it was trained to understand. Broader applications of the technology could see it being used to make game developers' lives easier when it comes to building a world or procedural generation. It could also potentially have real world applications, helping autonomous robots understand how to work in a warehouse or on an assembly line.
For now it's more of a technological marvel. An alternative, less terrifying use of deepfake's building blocks put to work on something uniquely exciting. You can read more about the work that went into creating Nvidia's GameGAN right here.
Topics Artificial Intelligence Gaming
Previous:Jacked Up
Glamorous teen applying flawless makeup is your new life coachDude unexpectedly snaps the perfect sunset wedding photoGlamorous teen applying flawless makeup is your new life coachKevin Hart withdraws from hosting the OscarsThank you for ending the war between Kim Kardashian and Chloë Grace Moretz, Hillary ClintonNFL fans lose it after Dolphins upend Patriots with a wild trick playiOS 12.1.1 expands eSIM support on the iPhone XR, XS, and XS MaxNetflix's Dumplin' is a glittery, enlightening treasure: ReviewArrested Huawei CFO potentially faces decades in jail50 dope Instagram pictures from Burning Man 2016Alexandria OcasioAmazon is targeting airports for its next cashierAmazon is targeting airports for its next cashierPatreon bans altThe 1 tiny, key detail in the new 'Game of Thrones' Season 8 teaser you may have missedCoinbase homepage ad reveals the sad state of the crypto marketGlamorous teen applying flawless makeup is your new life coachWhy you should add 'About Time' to your holiday movie listiOS 12.1.1 expands eSIM support on the iPhone XR, XS, and XS MaxA bizarre Instagram glitch is the reason your feed is messed up FrolicMe's glossy videos are actual 'porn for women' The first quarantine concert is a preview of music's weird future What is Auto 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for April 16 This social distancing picnic blanket will make you look forward to summer We got real 'Simpsons' animators to make Zoom backgrounds. They're awesome. 'Wordle' today: Here's the answer, hints for April 15 Why some viruses die out in summer, but others thrive Veruca Salt's 'Seether' was the perfect 'Yellowjackets' needle drop You can now meet and adopt a dog on Zoom Barack Obama offers sage advice to 2020's 'Zoom University' graduates Artists donate free, uplifting images to the UN in pandemic response Here are the 15 best tweets of the week 10 ways to make your work from home desk less depressing 'Double Rainbow Guy,' Paul Vasquez, has died a decade after he achieved viral fame Intercom drops Twitter support citing Musk's new exorbitant API pricing What is a spit kink? Here's everything you need to know. 'Wordle' for math: 'New York Times' introduces new game 'Digits' Guy Fieri has reached an emotional turning point 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for April 15
1.4775s , 8222.609375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch 365 Days Online】,New Knowledge Information Network