In a 2016 NHK documentary exploring the life of recently retired director Hayao Karenzaki, there is a scene where he calls a 3D simulation program “an insult to life” after seeing a creature Creepy abominations are created inside the program.
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In Never-Ending Man: Hayao Miyazaki, a 2016 NHK documentary that explores the life of recently retired director Hayao Miyazaki, there is a scene he calls the 3D simulation program “an insult to life” after seeing a creepy crawling creature created in the show. Now, seven years later, show creator Masayoshi Nakamura and Attructure Inc. is back with a new game: ANLIFE: Motion-Learning Life Evolution.
As for what exactly the game is, the Steam page explains it as follows:
Interfere with the evolution of virtual life forms that learn to navigate in a world powered by a physical engine This world already has built-in mechanisms such as heredity and natural selection. Players act as creators, manipulating these natural processes to help life forms learn and grow.
The game is stated to have “no set gameplay or goals” and appears to be a simulator that allows you to play with the environment and create genetic mutations to watch the creatures in the biome evolve. how to become.
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According to the Steam page, Attructure Inc. ANLIFE: Motion-Learning Life Evolution will release the game this year.
In the documentary, Miyazaki and Ghibli producer Toshio Suzuki attend a presentation by a CGI team at the Dwango Artificial Intelligence Laboratory led by then-Dwango president Nobuo Kawakami.
One thing’s for sure: the cuboid creatures in ANLIFE look a lot cuter than Miyazaki ever had to endure. Perhaps Nakamura had memorized the legendary director’s remarks.
Source: IT media news