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No one died.
Yet. But we probably will eventually—from
exhaustion.
Don’t worry, this isn’t a negative post. There are no delays, no disasters. The update is closing in right on schedule, just as we promised.
But… we wanted to talk about something. Something that’s been a hot topic behind the scenes lately.
Let’s just say, the discussions got
passionate. Chairs flying, tables flipping, and moral standpoints colliding. Finding a middle ground wasn’t easy.
Let’s face it, AI is growing. It’s everywhere.
And while working on some of the update’s more demanding parts, we asked ourselves:
what matters most to us?
The answer came
instantly,
consistency.
We don’t want five or six months between updates. We take pride in our release speed. From the outside, that looks great, but from the inside, it comes at a cost. It affects us, personally and creatively.
That’s not a complaint, it’s just reality. And we keep pushing through because we love what we do.
Now, AI. It’s intriguing… and controversial.
We’ve been producing a lot of cinematics for this update, but with the workload and pressure of keeping our word, we looked for alternatives.
Not replacements,
enhancements. Tools that might help us speed up production without sacrificing control.
AI can’t write for us. It doesn’t
know our characters.
It can’t feel what Michael feels, or understand what makes Michael tick. Or any of the characters. Even if we tried to explain it, it would never capture the intent or emotion we put into our stories.
That’s why AI will never touch our writing,
ever. Unless it hacks our PC's, but good luck with that!
But cinematics? That’s where curiosity kicked in.
Our GPUs are screaming for mercy, software crashing, temps spiking. So we thought,
why not try letting AI enhance what we already create?
As a creative force on its own? AI is absolute crap.
We fed it one image, and the horrors we saw made
The Conjuring look like a romantic comedy. So we said: “Yeah, no, screw that.”
But we kept experimenting.
If it can save us some time, let us deliver updates faster, then fine. We’ll take it as a
tool,
not a crutch.
Did it help? Sure, a bit. It maybe shaved 10% off our workload. Still left us with 90% of the heavy lifting, video editing, post-processing, polishing. But every bit counts.
Then someone asked, “What about sex scenes?”
Cue the chaos. “That’s not gonna fly.” “Just give it a shot!”
Fine. We tried.
The results?
Surprisingly… impressive.
No six fingers. No two heads. Almost flawless.
And then came the
moral dilemma. The
existential crisis.
We’ve always said we’d stay transparent. And if we start breaking our own word, then nothing we say matters.
So no,
this isn’t a post about us switching to AI-made sex scenes. Quite the opposite.
We decided that while we may lack experience in that area, we’ll improve
ourselves. We’ll learn. We’ll get better. Even if it takes longer.
Because shortcuts don’t build skill, and they don’t teach you anything.
Does that mean some of the upcoming scenes of mature content may suck? Not be as professional or WOW? Basic? Decent? Yep, sure as hell does. But would we rather learn, improve, make, rather than go and say "I need a BJ scene pretty please." No, not really. It won't be consistent, feed it a different camera angle and you're finished.
AI is controversial for a reason.
Half the world is shouting
“Burn it to the Ground,” and the other half is singing
“What Are You Waiting For.”
Our stance?
AI has a place as an
enhancer, a
tool to help manage time, not replace talent. But creation? That’s sacred.
No matter how “good” it looks, relying on it fully creates more problems than it solves.
Art loses its humanity when you let machines tell the story for you.
So this isn’t just about us, it’s about
you, the people who play our work.
And we’d genuinely love your thoughts.
We’re not naming names, but many AVN devs already use AI for animation and sex scenes.
We’re not here to judge. We’re here to ask something important:
Do players really need to know the behind-the-scenes process—or just receive the product they paid for?
Do players care how it’s made, as long as it looks good?
To us, those two questions define the line between honesty and convenience.
We believe in being transparent.
Because the moment our word means nothing to
us, it means nothing to
anyone else.
So tell us what do
you think? This post is public and open to anyone, so, feel free to drop your comments. We'd appreciate any form of insight, opinions and viewpoints. You have right on them, after all.