![]() With over 590 days remaining, the LEGO Untitled Goose Game project has amassed 2,190 fans vouching for it.Īfter it gets the necessary support, LEGO will then approve the project alongside other potential Ideas creations. Right now things are looking pretty hopeful though, as the creation is already well on its way to hitting the required 10,000-supporter milestone. With the project landing on LEGO’s Ideas program, there’s no telling if the Untitled Goose Game build will actually hit store shelves at any point in the future. All of which come together so you’ll be able to recreate many of your favorite scenes from the game. From the goose itself to a gardener minifigure and tons of accessories like a sun hat and even a “no goose” sign. Just about everything that fans of the game could expect have been included in this model. Builder A Fellow Player is one of the first and most notable attempts at bringing the lovable yet annoying goose into the blocky medium with their fan-made project. You can order my book You Look Like a Thing and I Love You! It’s out November 5 2019.With as popular as Untitled Goose Game was, it was only a matter of time before someone gave it the LEGO treatment. Or become a free subscriber to get new AI Weirdness posts in your inbox. A combination goose-robo-apocalypse would be a terrible sight to behold.ĪI Weirdness supporters get bonus content: A couple more lists of neural net-generated goose tasks, including one list where the neural net was strangely obsessed with stumps. Of course, some of the neural net’s to-do tasks invented new and, um, murder-y ways of antagonizing the groundskeeper. ![]() Paint the Chicken with the Golden Hourglass I don’t know what game has these in its to-do list, but maybe I need to play it. Praise the Groundskeeper for the work he has done for youĪnd some of the tasks were beyond weird, into seriously glitchy AI territory. But its tasks were usually out of character for a goose that’s supposed to be antagonizing everyone and everything. It seemed to at least be mostly sure that this was a list of tasks for a video game, because it would often end its list by offering (completely wrong) tips on getting past the groundskeeper. The neural net had no basis for games based on low-stakes goose mayhem, so I can hardly blame it for floundering. Make the Groundskeeper Make the Groundskeeper Squeak in the Wind and Drink Water Make the Groundskeeper Have Meatball Litter Make the Groundskeeper Have a Can of Cans Make the Groundskeeper Have an Expeller Sink His Head into the Lake and Enjoy a Waterfall Make the Groundskeeper Eat Some Ice Cream Make the Groundskeeper Take a Dip in the Pond Make the Groundskeeper Put His Hat on His Head and Take a Sniff The goose is causing stuff to happen to the groundskeeper, but it’s weird stuff, or else things that aren’t annoyances exactly. But is this a list for a horrible goose, or a list for some kind of exuberant witch? Have an Affectionate ConversationĪnd then there’s THIS list, which is at least somewhat unsettling, I’ll give it that. Get the Stones to the LakeĪnother of the neural net’s lists involved at least interacting with the groundskeeper, which is a start, since that’s how the game begins too. It’s more like a goose-run landscaping service. Very busy, but not exactly a reign of terror. I used to give GPT-2 the first 8 to-do list items from Untitled Goose Game, and then its job was to add more items to the list. Given just a few items on the horrible goose’s to-do list as examples, could the neural net figure out that it’s supposed to be inventing ways a goose can be a menace? When the neural net GPT-2 was trained, the goose game didn’t exist in its training data, nor did anything quite like it. ![]() ![]() You have a to-do list of mayhem such as: Get Into the Garden There’s a game called Untitled Goose Game, in which you play as a horrible goose that wreaks various forms of mischief on some mild-mannered villagers.
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