RadGamerMom, ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆBLM

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RadGamerMom, ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆBLM

RadGamerMom, ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆBLM

@RadGamerMom1

Technical Writer, @EpicGames, formerly @RedStorm, @Respawn. UE, UEFN, VFX, FN Creative. She/they. I'm just a bunch of words in pants.

North Carolina, USA ๊ฐ€์ž…์ผ ลžubat 2020
223 ํŒ”๋กœ์ž‰349 ํŒ”๋กœ์›Œ
RadGamerMom, ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆBLM
TFW you forget to take your sleepy time meds because youโ€™re in a huge-ass dungeon in the game and you just want to get to the end and then a fanfic you love gets updated andโ€ฆI donโ€™t know if I can sleep.
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RadGamerMom, ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆBLM
I realized I was playing Metaphor Refantazio on Normal. I was doing okay mostly, it was more grind-ey than was enjoyable. One dungeon I considered skipping but a new strategy (several, really) and Easy mode made play much more fun.
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RadGamerMom, ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆBLM ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Heather Storm
Heather Storm@heatherldstormยท
Hey Friends -- Going live at 6pm MT over on twitch & YT and playing some Infinity Nikki while raising money for Extra Life! Hope to see you there extra-life.org/index.cfm?fuseโ€ฆ
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RadGamerMom, ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆBLM ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Fortnite
Fortnite@Fortniteยท
Prepare to ROOOAAARRR!
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RadGamerMom, ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆBLM ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
John Romero ๐Ÿค˜๐Ÿฝ
Without Nasir, there is no DOOM. His work was the inspiration for so many game developers. #programmedbynasir
Genkiโœจ@Genki_JPN

Japanese national TV managed to track down and do a rare interview with Nasir Gebelli, the genius Iranian-American Programmer that programmed the first Final Fantasy game! #FinalFantasy He lead the programming for the first 3 Final Fantasy games. What a legend!

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Christian Allen
Christian Allen@Serellanยท
I will never unhear that sound.
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RadGamerMom, ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆBLM ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
RayBenefield
RayBenefield@RayBenefieldยท
๐Ÿคซ๐Ÿคซ๐Ÿคซ Yes... I released a public thing yesterday. No... I'm not marketing it yet, cuz I still have lots of work to do. AND... I'm working on a YT video script for a long form video fully explaining what the future of game dev looks like and what I'm doing in relation to that.
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RadGamerMom, ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆBLM
@DevinNash Very interesting content here but you buried the ledeโ€ฆyou should have put your statement that itโ€™s a *problem* ahead of all your facts and predictions. Thatโ€™s the real point of your post, but I have to read TEN PARAGRAPHS before I get to that point.
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Devin
Devin@DevinNashยท
2025 will be one of the most significant years in content creation. In all my years in this business Iโ€™ve never seen a greater change agent than whatโ€™s coming. Below are some of my predictions for content creation and what creators should be thinking about and doing. This thread will focus on video. As usual Iโ€™ll either look like a prophet or a fool but a lot of this is coming and those not ready will end up out of the game. AI is going to change content creation in ways almost no one understands that isnโ€™t using it daily. Many AI-generated still images are already indistinguishable from real ones, which alone has massive implications for image platforms (Instagram), photographers, and artists. Youโ€™re already seeing this debate about AI art vs. real art. Humans have an accuracy rate of about 48% when classifying faces as real or AI generated (CRJ, s41235-023-00499-6) - but this debate only exists because that gap hasnโ€™t closed yet. In less than 2 years AI vs real art will be indistinguishable. However this still is a tiny shadow of whatโ€™s to come. Video and Youtube The big leap in 2025 will be video. Most average, non-technical users (99% of viewers) will not distinguish AI channels from real ones. Youtube Shorts and Tiktok are dominated by AI voiceovers, and AI-driven channels are becoming increasingly popular (CourtroomConsequences for example with 1mil+ subscribers.) To understand what will happen to Youtube, we need to talk about content creation on Youtube vs other platforms like Twitch. Right now almost anyone who uploads consistently and innovates can be successful on Youtube. But this is not so on other platforms like Twitch. Why? It comes down to the number of available viewers vs. number of videos/channels competing for that attention. Simple supply and demand. This is called a viewer ratio. The viewer ratio on Twitch is 25.4 to 1. Meaning for every stream there are only 25 viewers available to watch it. This number is way less in practice though because most viewers prefer large broadcasts, then mid-sized broadcasts, and then finally small streams. Twitch has many problems but the largest, unsolvable one is simple supply and demand. There arenโ€™t enough viewers available to fill up all the streams. Weโ€™ll talk about that more in a Twitch/livestreaming predictions post Iโ€™ll make later. By contrast, Youtube has a viewer ratio of closer to 300 to 1. With 2.7 billion users, you can upload a video and if itโ€™s not terrible, expect to get views. Youtube is top-heavy like Twitch, but because of the sheer number of users versus the relative lack of consistent content creators, if you build on Youtube in 2025, you can grow. Consistency in content creation is rare, with half of the Podcasts on Apple having 3 or less episodes, and less than 1% of Youtube channels having more than 50 videos. Most people give up. So thereโ€™s plenty of viewers to go around for those who work hard and stay with it. All this will start changing in 2025. AI tools like Sora and Heygen will make video easy. AI influencers will start to show up everywhere. We will see an explosion of channels run by AI. In 1-3 years (and maybe even the end of 2025) you will not be able to tell if Vtuber personas are piloted by real people or an AI. A short time after that it will be the case for ALL videos. We are way closer to this than everyone thinks. Go to my Youtube channel to see videos of me speaking in perfect Chinese, AI influencers talking through products, etc. An AI influencer on Twitch currently has over 50,000 subscribers (thatโ€™s $175,000/month btw in revenue for anyone keeping score) and is in the top 100th viewership percentile at 10,867 viewers average. This AI is piloted by a skilled streamer (Vedal987), but the AI (Neuro) does just fine on her own on Youtube with music covers regularly breaking half a million views. This is all happening right now. And today is the worst this technology will ever be. AI video and influencers will dominate in a way that will shrink the viewer ratio on all platforms. Imagine a world where millions (maybe billions) more videos are being uploaded per day because it will take no effort besides prompting to produce these videos. And this wonโ€™t be the low quality AI slop that you mostly see now. It will be LLMs trained on influencers and the content will be indistinguishable from the original creators. We are already doing this for my content on my Discord, and the advice AI gives is similar to mine, and I am an expert in my field. Imagine a hundred, a thousand, or any number you want more trained influencers with PHD (GPT o3 current benchmarks) expertise in a field, and you will understand that most content creators on Youtube are facing an existential threat within two years. More creative entertainment, narrative, and documentary channels will come after that. There will be pushback. People will react to seeing their favorite influencers get outcompeted in the algorithm. There will be a preference for human channels. There will be a problem verifying them. Weโ€™re entering a world where you can recreate someone like Asmongold talking about a hundred different subjects in a hundred different ways. People will not be able to tell the difference between videos made by him and those made by AI. AI influencers will masquerade as humans. Some will get outed in big controversies. It is going to get really weird. This will be a problem for ALL information, including political leaders. Official channels notwithstanding, clips and video will be shared everywhere. Those of us in the advertising world already know this is a massive problem. People like Joe Rogan are being used to push supplements and advertise fake products. For 90%+ of people today, the fake Joe Rogan is indistinguishable from the real one. You cannot shut this down because for every single one you hit, ten more will spin up. Joe (and many major influencers) have addressed this on his podcast as an unsolvable problem. As far as I can tell, Youtube (or any platform) is not ready for any of this. While official channels exist, the proliferation of clips and videos is everywhere. X is trying to solve this with verified users - the idea being that bots canโ€™t spin up at scale to be paid users (Twitter Blue.) The bots would get shut down and it would cost the bot creators (who are usually second or third world agents) too much money to keep verifying them. This is a great idea, but it doesnโ€™t address all problems, for example foreign agents, who have a lot of money and motivation. Worse, there isnโ€™t a platform incentive for Youtube to solve this. AI agents generate revenue for Youtube in the same way influencers do. They create interesting content so viewers watch ads. Viewers are already showing they donโ€™t care if content is AI or not, they just care if itโ€™s good. The hope is Youtube/Google chooses humans over AI for ethical reasons, and supports human content creators while suppressing AI-only channels. But this assumes Youtube has a way to differentiate the two, and as far as I can tell - aside from a manual prompt currently in the video upload section - it doesnโ€™t. Especially as video gets indistinguishable from real video, I donโ€™t know if Youtube even has a way to tell the two apart. There are some early experiments to attach blockchain verification as a form of digital footprint. I believe this will work but there are way too few people thinking about this. The tsunami of fake content will hit way before these solutions are explored and adopted. Many influencers in 2025 will start to lose viewership and not understand why. If you are a content creator, your best bet is to capture the audience now and build the largest foundation of followers/subscribers possible before the huge waves of AI competition hit. 2025 needs to be your breakout year. You need to hit 2025 harder than any other time. Also certain types of influencers are far more protected than others. Innovators with creative sets and hard-to-duplicate storylines like Mr. Beast, Kai Cenat, and Mark Rober will be fine through the next several years. Talking heads, info content, and reacts without large existing subscriber bases are screwed, and I have no solution for you but to build now or buckle up. 2025 is going to be an absolutely crazy year. People who work with AI first will have outsized results versus people who donโ€™t. They will be so far ahead. This is the year beyond all others to pay attention, study, and get to work. Thanks for reading. If it makes you feel any better, I have no solution to this either and will probably be packing fries with the rest of you until the McDonalds robot steals that job too.
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RadGamerMom, ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆBLM ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Ben Cloward
Ben Cloward@BenClowardยท
After uploading free shader tutorial videos for just over 5 years, I finally decided it was a good time to make a channel intro video. Take a look! You might find something you didn't know I covered. youtu.be/mSsqy0gYoHw
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RadGamerMom, ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆBLM ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Noah
Noah@NoahUEFNยท
Lenka (@LenkaAccount) made me aware of a FIX for the Stat Creator Device JIP bugs and It's pretty simple to setup: 1. Place two Channel Devices: connect one to Enable and the other to the Disable of the Stat Creator. 2. Paste this code into a Verse File pastebin.com/8Cwi6ysg 3. Connect all 1.0 devices to the Verse Device you've placed in the world. Enjoy! This is a game-changer for UMG UI already. ๐Ÿ’ฏ
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