Mtgzone asks you to name your favorite Magic card and explain why. So, the AI would need to understand all that, know the name of a Magic card, and say what’s good about it.
As a Magic: The Gathering player, one of my favorite cards is “Solemn Simulacrum.” It’s not the flashiest card, but it offers so much value. When it enters the battlefield, you get to search your library for a basic land and put it onto the battlefield tapped, which helps with mana ramp. Then, when it dies, you get to draw a card. It’s a solid choice for any deck that needs mana fixing and card draw, making it a great utility creature. Plus, there’s something comforting about playing a card that’s both reliable and versatile, fitting into so many different strategies.
Needs a bit of work, but that generally does the task
Some software engineers are worried that they’ll take their jobs, but at this point of development, they’re simply not capable enough to successfully, reliably, and robustly implement a system with more than relatively trivial boilerplate logic - and that doesn’t even touch on the creation of robust testing frameworks and the logic therein.
Are bots incapable of doing that?
Not anymore since chatgpt, but not everyone has caught up to that yet.
Mtgzone asks you to name your favorite Magic card and explain why. So, the AI would need to understand all that, know the name of a Magic card, and say what’s good about it.
Without refining the prompt on chat gpt:
Needs a bit of work, but that generally does the task
That’s actually really easy for an LLM
Some software engineers are worried that they’ll take their jobs, but at this point of development, they’re simply not capable enough to successfully, reliably, and robustly implement a system with more than relatively trivial boilerplate logic - and that doesn’t even touch on the creation of robust testing frameworks and the logic therein.