The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Bing Chat Edition — ambitious but brief


I’m sure most of you know about ChatGPT by now. It’s that buzzword floating around conversations whenever the topic changes to AI, whether it’s Microsoft’s Bing Chat (opens in new tab) or one of its competitors; there are plenty of exciting uses for digital assistants. Plenty of people had demonstrated creative uses for manipulating the language learning models, leading to the eventual addition of dedicated creative modes allowing a little more flexibility in its answers.

Even I’ve burned multiple hours of my evenings asking AI bots silly questions, prompting dumbed-down versions of high-brow concepts with Bing Chat explaining them to me like I’m a monkey. Technology good. Banana also good. Once you’ve exhausted a line of inquiry about the meaning of the universe, it’s easy to turn to fiction.

It turns out Bing can offer brand-new adventures within the worlds of your favorite video games; if you’re willing to stimulate your imagination. The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Bing Chat edition exists in theory, but something left me feeling disappointed after playing.

(Image credit: Ben Wilson | Windows Central)

Fire up Bing Chat on Microsoft Edge or whatever browser you’d prefer to use with the magic of some simple extensions (opens in new tab), and you’ll see the option for the AI assistant to reply in a ‘more creative’ manner. It starts straightforward enough, testing Bing’s knowledge of Skyrim (opens in new tab) as a video game that not only exists but has existed for what feels like an eternity. As expected, the response reads like the introduction to a Wikipedia page, boring as ever, filled with platforms, dates, and a noticeable lack of creativity.





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