IGN Logo
IGN LIVE Tickets Now on Sale!
Skip to content
IGN Plus
Home
Guides
Interactive Maps
Playlist
Store
Rewards

Site Themes

Change Region

Africa (opens in a new window)AdriaAustralia (opens in a new window)Benelux (opens in a new window)Brazil (opens in a new window)Canada (opens in a new window)China (opens in a new window)Czech / Slovakia (opens in a new window)France (opens in a new window)Germany (opens in a new window)Greece (opens in a new window)Hungary (opens in a new window)India (opens in a new window)Ireland (opens in a new window)Israel (opens in a new window)Italy (opens in a new window)Japan (opens in a new window)Latin AmericaMiddle East - EnglishMiddle East - ArabicNordicPakistan (opens in a new window)Poland (opens in a new window)Portugal (opens in a new window)Romania (opens in a new window)Southeast AsiaSpain (opens in a new window)Turkey (opens in a new window)United Kingdom (opens in a new window)United States (opens in a new window)

More

IGN on socialAbout UsAccessibilityPrivacy PolicyTerms of UseEditorial StandardsDo Not Sell My Personal InformationSite MapBoardsContact SupportAdvertise With IGN - CORP
©1996-2024 IGN Entertainment, Inc. a Ziff Davis company. All Rights Reserved. IGN® is among the federally registered trademarks of IGN Entertainment, Inc. and may only be used with explicit written permission.

News

All NewsColumnsPlayStationXboxNintendoPCMobileMoviesTelevisionComicsTech

Reviews

All ReviewsEditor's ChoiceGame ReviewsMovie ReviewsTV Show ReviewsTech Reviews

Discover

Videos

Original ShowsPopularTrailersGameplayAll Videos

Account

ProfileLogin SettingsSubscriptionNewsletters

20Q #XX: undefined

Register to keep your streak
 or 
Try to guess the video game: In the input field, type a question that could be answered "yes" or "no". You can ask up to 20 questions before the game is over.

Quick tips to help you guess the answer faster
  • Stick to questions that will be answered with “yes” or “no”
  • Any questions that you ask will count as part of your 20 questions
  • Try to guess the game with as few questions as possible
  • Get an ad-free experience with IGN Plus and gain access to all previous games
3 days
IGN Live Is Almost Here... Get Your Tickets Now!
ISSUE NO. 4

Why AI Can't Replace Critics

AI can learn to play a game, but it couldn't tell you if it's fun or not.

Review Code
By Dan Stapleton
Updated: Apr 21, 2023 3:35 pm
Posted: Apr 21, 2023 3:25 pm

“Don’t give me your opinion, just tell me if this game is good or not.” I wish I were making that quote up or that the person who wrote it in the comments of a review was being satirical, but unless they were extremely dedicated to the bit I fear it was a genuine request from someone who doesn’t understand that reviews are, by definition, opinions. And that’s not an uncommon misconception: a lot of people believe that when they disagree with a critic’s opinion it must be because that critic isn’t being “objective,” which they take to mean evaluating it without any emotion or personal preferences factored in – which is of course impossible for a human being to do, as the entire point of any form of art is to inspire an emotional reaction in people who experience it.

If it were possible to review art objectively, based purely on the facts and without human emotion, AI would be the ultimate critic: it has no concept of things like hype or disappointment; it can’t be swayed by genre preferences, brand loyalties, or personal grudges against a developer that ran over its dog; it can’t be intentionally contrarian; and it can’t be bribed.

AI can analyze the data on a screen and even identify people present, but it doesn’t understand what makes writing and acting work
“

But here’s the problem: while an AI certainly could learn to play a game (we play against forms of AI in games all the time), it wouldn’t play like you or I because it doesn’t have any concept of what’s fun to do and what’s not. It would only try to complete it in the most efficient way possible, never missing a shot or being hit by an avoidable attack. It wouldn’t be able to tell you if a weapon is creatively designed or if an enemy was annoying to deal with. It wouldn’t know if managing your inventory was tedious or if upgrades were meaningful and rewarding. It couldn’t distinguish good graphics from bad ones beyond counting pixels and frame rates, and it would be incapable of telling you if the music got stuck in its head. The same is true of movies or TV shows – it can analyze the data on a screen and even identify people and objects present, but it simply doesn’t understand what makes writing and acting work.

As an experiment, I asked ChatGPT to tell me if Forspoken was a good game. It thought for a moment before responding: “There are a few different ways to approach this problem, but one possible method is to use the Pythagorean theorem to find the missing side length,” and then rambled on for over a page describing various uses for the famous geometric equation.

But that was a fluke; I then asked it if Top Gun: Maverick was a good movie, and it responded appropriately: “I am an AI language model and do not have the ability to form opinions or provide personal recommendations. However, the quality of a movie is subjective and opinions on Top Gun: Maverick may vary. It is best to read reviews or watch the trailer to get an idea of whether the movie may be to your liking.” That’s good advice, and I can appreciate that it knows and is honest about its own limitations.

Then I told it to write a review of Top Gun: Maverick, and it went right ahead in spite of itself.

A bit generic, but I’ve certainly read worse reviews written by humans. But wait, didn’t you just say you don’t have the ability to form opinions? Where did this come from then?

In other words, AI can’t answer the question of whether a game or movie is good, and why, because it doesn’t feel. Whether that’s fun, sadness, anger, awe of beauty, or anything else, it simply isn’t capable of experiencing any of that first-hand. And since it can’t have those experiences itself, when you ask it whether something is good or not it’s simply searching the internet and regurgitating the opinions of people who have – no different from an aggregator.

That means AI does pose a threat to professional critics in that it can very effectively gather and summarize their thoughts without paying them anything (a problem that will affect every type of content creator, and something that will certainly have to be worked out in court before too long), but it cannot replace them. Without critics watching and playing things before they’re widely available, AI would have nothing to draw from when people ask it these questions until after they’re out and people are posting about it on social media. Which would be fine for a lot of people, but we know from Google Trends that interest in reviews is highest just before things come out to the public, after which point demand drops off considerably. So when most people are asking the question of whether something is good, AI is not equipped to answer it.

And really, that’s for the best: the day an AI can tell you if it thinks a game or movie is good or bad will be the same day it forms an opinion on whether the human race deserves to exist, and we all know how that’s likely to go. In fact, IGN can recommend you a few good movies on the subject.

Dan Stapleton is IGN's Director of Reviews. Follow him on Twitter.

In This Article

Top Gun: Maverick
Top Gun: Maverick
Jerry Bruckheimer Films May 27, 2022
Theater

Review Code Column

See all
6 issues
ISSUE NO. 6

The Spoilerphobe's Guide To Reading IGN Reviews

ISSUE NO. 5

Game Reviews and The Impossible Problem of Bugs

ISSUE NO. 4

Why AI Can't Replace Critics

ISSUE NO. 3

Why Doesn’t IGN Review Everything X Times and Average the Scores?

ISSUE NO. 2

‘Another 7, IGN?’ Why So Many Games Score 7 and Above

ISSUE NO. 1

Why Launch Day No Longer Means Launch Day

IGNRecommends

Like a Dragon Is Getting Its Own Live-Action Series on Prime Video
Like a Dragon Is Getting Its Own Live-Action Series on Prime Video
54
Why Venom: The Last Dance Needs to Finally Introduce This Epic Marvel Villain
Why Venom: The Last Dance Needs to Finally Introduce This Epic Marvel Villain
58
X/Twitter Is Officially Allowing Porn and Other Adult Content
X/Twitter Is Officially Allowing Porn and Other Adult Content
498
The Games Leaving Xbox Game Pass in June 2024 Have Been Revealed
The Games Leaving Xbox Game Pass in June 2024 Have Been Revealed
50
The Watchers: Ishana Night Shyamalan's Horror Film Draws From Irish Folklore
The Watchers: Ishana Night Shyamalan's Horror Film Draws From Irish Folklore
24
Sony Shares Official Trailer for Venom: The Last Dance
Sony Shares Official Trailer for Venom: The Last Dance
175
Dragon is Dead Kept Me Up Until 5 AM And I Love That For Me
Dragon is Dead Kept Me Up Until 5 AM And I Love That For Me
59
The X-Men Movie Timeline, Explained
The X-Men Movie Timeline, Explained
137
IGN Logo
Reviews•Editor Columns•News•Guides•Best Gaming Accessories•Dragon's Dogma 2 Interactive Map•GTA 5 Cheats•IGN Store•HowLongToBeat•Deals•Contact Us•IGN YouTube•IGN TikTok•IGN Twitter•Map Genie
IGN supports Group Black and its mission to increase greater diversity in media voices and media ownership. Group Black's collective includes Cxmmunity, Black Women Talk Tech and AFROPUNK