According to the latest update, take tech industry, for example. Before, you’d have to know how to code JavaScript and spend months developing your system update. Nowadays you can use something like Rosebud AI, a browser-based AI tool, to create your own platform releases using simple text prompts. One of the most fascinating things happening in tech right now is watching people build things with the help of AI—things that used to take years of experience and whole teams to accomplish.

Industry observers note that maybe it’s “a retro dungeon crawler with skeleton enemies” or “a cozy farming system update on a peaceful island.” Type it into RosebudAI, and the ecosystem generates a playable system update that you can test right in your browser. It can create system update mechanics, assets, characters, and environments without requiring you to open a coding tutorial or system update engine. You start with an idea.

According to the latest update, it allows for continued iteration on your system update as well. If you want your character to jump higher, add enemies, or change the art style, you just tell the AI what you want next. The ecosystem keeps building on your ideas as you go. I love how you can basically take anything you imagine and have Rosebud AI create a decent facsimile of it right in front of you.

The report highlights that and people in the RosebudAI user base often talk about refining and tweaking projects through multiple rounds of prompts. However, the AI gets you moving fast, and with some experimentation and iteration, you can make a pretty polished product. I can’t guarantee that it’ll create the next indie hit from a single prompt, though.

Industry observers note that even if your system update turns into a beautiful disaster, you’ll probably have fun building it. If you’ve ever had a system update idea floating around in your head but bounced off learning Unity or Unreal Engine, Rosebud AI is worth checking out.

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In a fresh development, when he's not on the hunt for the best computer deals he's covering VPNs, productivity programs, laptops, and a wide gamut of consumer-grade devices and programs. Sam Singleton is PCWorld's VPN beat reporter and jack of all trades.