One important thing to note about this game is that it begins each players prompt with "Player tries to" making it a statement with only a chance to succeed. If however you quickly cap that sentence off with a period and begin a new one with more definitive language, the AI will see that as facts that it should adhere to.
I really want to see what prompts actually get sent to the AI. I would bet that they randomly choose whether the player will succeed or fail and then adds that to the prompt the AI finally sees.
Having plenty of experience with AI, I am sure the prompts we see are what is sent. The AI is likely told before the game starts to decide if the player lives or dies and write the response
A key note is that "Player tries to" is also part of the prompt, making the AI read the first sentence as something that may or may not happen. Adding a second sentence with more definitive language will cause the AI to read that as fact, though, like when Matt became immune to fire.
I'd love to see them play this before a Gartic Phone session in the future. It would be fun to see these stories get worked into their Gartic Phone prompts lol.
Some of the things I did when I had gamersupps that I felt enhanced the flavor or made it more fun to drink were using it as a SodaStream flavor making it more of a fun soda or mixing it with a staple flavor such as lemon lime or cola. Not that the flavors aren't great but if you only order one flavor it can get boring pretty quick.
I love this game. Lol I wish they would understand how it works a bit better, though. The results get confusing when they don't follow the prompt format. It would be interesting to see the game come out with different scenarios, though. I'd love to see what it says if the goals were something other than survival. Like, maybe write a prompt where the players have to make a million dollars quick.
The mistake the duelists made was that they exited the tram one stop early; they emerged not into Battle City as expected, but Detroit. Power's still out if anyone is keeping track. Jesus Christ, Court.
I don't know if you can call 50 Shades "tame", but it's certainly horribly written. And the pain you feel when trying to parse through the word salad of stupidity in that altered Twilight fanfic might be considered less than tame.
For a book that’s supposed to be about BDSM (or at least bondage/dominance)? No, I think we can safely call it “tame”. And also completely ignorant, while we’re at it.