Duke football will play for the ACC championship — and, potentially, a College Football Playoff berth — after all. The Blue Devils, who have five losses on the season, were sent to the ACC ...
“Vibe coding” appeared in early 2025 to describe the simple idea of programming with AI tools. So I tested a range of them — and these are the three best ones. Vibe coding transcends small projects, ...
Fastbreak AI, a firm that specializes in sports scheduling optimization, is raising $40 million in new funding as artificial intelligence services get more integrated into sports leagues around the ...
Hobbyist game developers and tinkerers who love the original Game Boy have a cool new book to pore over. Game Boy Coding Adventure is the latest release from No Starch Press, a publisher specializing ...
Google AI Studio product lead teased that everyone will be able to vibe code video games by the end of the year. Vibe coding is one of the selling points of generative AI, but it's also overhyped.
Electronic Arts has announced a new partnership with Stability AI, the creator of AI image generation tool Stable Diffusion. The company will "co-develop transformative AI models, tools, and workflows ...
RPGs For one Spider-Man 2, you could make 30 Clair Obscur: Expedition 33s, as dev reveals it cost less than $10 million Horror Games Valve's "final decision" is that surreal horror game Horses will ...
Microsoft Gaming just made one of its biggest missteps since the Xbox One launch event – but we think Rockstar could turn help turn this one around. Earlier this week, Microsoft announced changes to ...
Elon Musk's AI company, xAI, is expanding into video game development, seeking candidates with game design experience. On Thursday morning, Musk shared a post on X from the account @techdevnotes that ...
If Toby Fox thinks his way of making games is pretty inefficient, that probably shouldn't be a big surprise given how many years it's taken to get a little over half of Deltarune into players' hands.
As reported by Automaton, a survey conducted by the Computer Entertainment Supplier’s Association (CESA) during June and July found that 51% of Japanese game companies are using AI in some capacity.