Dungeons & Diagnoses — a fantasy therapy sim.

https://lemmy.world/post/44087194

Stop using AI, that instantly makes me uninterested in your game. Your title picture for this poat has two ampersands, after that I found more stuff that was wrong. I bet the translation is also AI.
Fair point on the AI art. The translations were also done with AI assistance — I’m not a polyglot. I reviewed and edited them, but I won’t pretend it was all manual work. As a solo dev with no budget, AI was the only way to make this happen at all. If that’s a dealbreaker for you, I get it

It’s lazy. And I mean this out of respect because I believe anyone that uses AI art has the potential to do basic drawings if they put in the effort. In a world where pixel graphics are popular and games like Among Us can make millions of dollars while looking like middle-school doodles there really is no excuse. I’m not saying you’re lazy because you literally made a game and that in and of itself is not lazy, I’m just saying AI art is lazy. People will have bucketloads more respect for you if you draw stick figures instead of using AI art. Not only that, most people (especially on this site) have a visceral reaction to AI art and will discount your game entirely if it has it. From a purely financial standpoint, is saving time really worth upsetting the very same people that want to give you money?

If it’s placeholder art I can totally understand that. You gotta get the game out somehow in order to actually acquire the funding you need. Maybe use that funding to eventually hire artists. Hell, I do pixel art as a hobby and you can hire me if you want. Just go to a site like Bluesky (even if you hate it) and search “pixel art” and you can find thousands of eager artists.

Anyway, that’s my advice. Good luck with your project it seems really neat. :)

That’s genuinely good advice, and I appreciate you taking the time to write it out. You’re right that placeholder art + real funding → real artist is the more honest path, and I’ll seriously consider it. And thank you for the offer — I might actually take you up on that one day. For now I just want to see if the game itself resonates with people before investing more into it. Really glad the concept seems neat to you. That means a lot.