Article 6MZ6S Microsoft Copilot will watch you play Minecraft, tell you what you’re doing wrong

Microsoft Copilot will watch you play Minecraft, tell you what you’re doing wrong

by
Kyle Orland
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6MZ6S)
zombie-800x429.png

Enlarge / In the recent past, you'd have to rely on your kid sibling to deliver Minecraft commentary like "Oh no, it's a zombie. Run!" (credit: Microsoft)

Longtime gamers (and/or Game Grumps fans) likely know that even single-player games can be a lot more fun with a friend hanging out nearby to offer advice, shoot the breeze, or just offer earnest reactions to whatever's happening on screen. Now, Microsoft is promising that its GhatGPT-4o-poweredCopilot system will soon offer an imitation of that pro-social experience even for Minecraft players who don't have any human friends available to watch them play.

In a pair of social media posts Monday, Microsoft highlighted how "real-time conversations with your AI companion copilot" can enhance an otherwise solitary Minecraft experience. In the first demo, the disembodied copilot voice tells the player how to craft a sword, walking him through the process of gathering some wood or stone to go with the sticks sitting in his inventory. In another, the AI identifies a zombie in front of the player and gives the (seemingly obvious) advice to run away from the threat and "make sure it can't reach you" by digging underground or building a tower of blocks.

Real time conversations with your AI companion Copilot, powered by OpenAI's GPT-4o. pic.twitter.com/Ug7EWv2sah

- Microsoft Copilot (@MSFTCopilot) May 20, 2024

These kinds of in-game pointers aren't the most revolutionary use of conversational AI-even a basic in-game tutorial/reference system or online walkthrough could deliver the same basic information, after all. Still, the demonstration stands out for just how that information is delivered to the player through a natural language conversation that doesn't require pausing the gameplay even briefly.

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