The gaming website IGN is launching an AI tool that'll hopefully help you troubleshoot and beat games. That might mean you get to say goodbye to those very specific Google searches and deep-dives through Reddit threads.
For now, the chatbot was launched only for IGN's The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdomguide. You'll eventually need an IGN account to access the chatbot but, for now, anyone can test it out.
IGN says the chatbot experience, which is still in the alpha release testing phase, is based off guides, tips, and other content written at the site as well as info from contributors' playthroughs.
"We envision this guides feature to act as a comprehensive search solution for those seeking fast answers to a tricky problem, providing solutions immediately and conveniently without having to look at multiple pages," IGN wrote in a post announcing the chatbot.
I don't play a ton of video games beyond sports titles, so I asked the bot if Tears of the Kingdom was friendly to beginners. At first, it looked like the chatbot was broken because the answer was quitedelayed, but it eventually gave me a pretty fitting response.
Of course, IGN's chatbot tried to direct me to some of the site's coverage which makes sense. It remains to be seen how helpful it ends up being for people trying to beat the game that drew rave reviews. But with time, perhaps all your gaming answers will just be one sentence away.
IGN and Mashable are both owned by Ziff Davis.
文章
86729
浏览
2
获赞
992
Dark Sky mercifully gives Android users 1 more month until shutdown
Dark Sky has been sold to Apple, there's no changing that.However, Android users of the service willSex with someone you don't live with is now illegal in England
No sex with people outside your household.That's a rule now enshrined in law in England as new legisBeyoncé shares open letter calling for charges in Breonna Taylor case
Beyoncé Knowles published an open letter to Louisville attorney general Daniel Cameron on SunGoogle to pay $3.8 million to underpaid female engineers and overlooked job candidates
Pay discrimination? In Silicon Valley? We're shocked.Google will be forced to cough up roughly $3.8Comedian gives her family brilliant informational pamphlets before going on a date
Anticipating her family's inevitable questions, Mary Beth Barone prepared an informational pamphletEmilia Clarke is launching a series of celebrity poetry readings on Instagram
Like many people, Emilia Clarke is currently stuck at home in the midst of the coronavirus pandemicGoogle's mobile search is getting a makeover for the new year
Google knows your eyes need a break. The notoriously data-hungry behemoth announced Friday an upcomi14 Harry Potter things to love that aren’t J.K. Rowling
On Saturday, J.K. Rowling posted her latest string of transphobic tweets, in which she suggested thaThe canceled SXSW Film Festival is coming to Amazon Prime Video
The South by Southwest Film Festival is back on — just not exactly in the way it was originallZuckerberg feared Facebook's conservative users, so they received special treatment
Facebook has long shown its preference for right-wing content, but a new report has made it clearerUber asked its drivers about working for the app. They didn’t hold back.
Uber just found out what drivers really think about driving for the ride-hailing and food delivery aA toilet flush interrupted the livestream of the Supreme Court's oral argument
Oh, the woes of life during a pandemic. Many activities are being done remotely — either via cCoronavirus pandemic signals need for COBOL computer programmers
Ventilators, retired doctors, N95 face masks — all have been in high demand from heads of statApple just released a security update for your iPhone. Download it now.
Keeping all your gadgets up to date is a never-ending pain, but a Tuesday announcement from Apple reOil prices are negative and nobody is really sure what that means
As the coronavirus pandemic stretches into 2020, the cost of crude oil plummeted to less than $0 per