🌐 公网静态版:本页由本机 GameBrief 生成并发布到 Cloudflare Pages。分析、抓取、LLM 推理仍在本机完成;收藏/更新等写操作请回本机服务。
"They have the biggest bullsh*t detectors on the planet": How the unlikely EVE Online x Google DeepMind AI partnership landed with players
📰 James Archer
👤 James Archer
🕒 2026-05-30 00:30:00
AI 摘要 · 其他
Fenris Creations(原CCP Games)宣布与Google DeepMind建立研究合作,后者将获得公司少数股权并训练AI代理,用于EVE Online的长期太空MMO项目。
The impact of generative AI upon PC gaming has proven controversial, which is my balanced journalist way of saying it’s been horrible. Players are
widely repulsed by genAI material
,
developers
and even
some publishers
are increasingly wary of its temptations, and in a rush to build the requisite infrastructure, component shortages have
ravaged
the
hardware market
. Nonetheless,
EVE Online
devs Fenris Creations – formerly CCP Games – have become dead keen on robot brains, and what they might be might be able to think up for EVE itself.
Earlier this month, a newly independent
Fenris announced a "research partnership" with Google DeepMind
, the search giant’s AI research division, that would see DeepMind take a minority stake in the company while training its AI agents on a separate, offline version of the longstanding space MMO. Days later, Fenris CEO Hilmar Veigar Pétursson sat onstage with DeepMind co-founder Adrian Bolton at the annual EVE FanFest conference to discuss the partnership, in a presentation that left the concrete plans of what it means for EVE still broadly vague – yet seemingly against the run of wider sentiment, escaped any significant backlash from the game’s historically outspoken playerbase.
Read more
widely repulsed by genAI material
,
developers
and even
some publishers
are increasingly wary of its temptations, and in a rush to build the requisite infrastructure, component shortages have
ravaged
the
hardware market
. Nonetheless,
EVE Online
devs Fenris Creations – formerly CCP Games – have become dead keen on robot brains, and what they might be might be able to think up for EVE itself.
Earlier this month, a newly independent
Fenris announced a "research partnership" with Google DeepMind
, the search giant’s AI research division, that would see DeepMind take a minority stake in the company while training its AI agents on a separate, offline version of the longstanding space MMO. Days later, Fenris CEO Hilmar Veigar Pétursson sat onstage with DeepMind co-founder Adrian Bolton at the annual EVE FanFest conference to discuss the partnership, in a presentation that left the concrete plans of what it means for EVE still broadly vague – yet seemingly against the run of wider sentiment, escaped any significant backlash from the game’s historically outspoken playerbase.
Read more