I made an educational open source game for small kids (2-6 yo) where they can match cute animals (currently sea creatures, dinosaurs, colours and fruit theme packs).

Features:

  • cute pictures
  • works on both a phone and a tablet
  • multiple theme packs
  • fully free, no tracking or anything
  • there are multiple flavours, one of which bundles all of the assets and doesn’t even have the permission to access the internet <- great if you’re extra cautious
  • big buttons, no reading necessary, small kids friendly

It can be downloaded both from GitHub and the Play Store.


Some screenshots

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Let me know what you think!

  • rumba@lemmy.zip
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    12 hours ago

    The noise in the outlines could have just been some accidental artifact in an edge detect, But those weird ass smudges in the green definitely don’t look human.

    That said, the art itself doesn’t look bad. If it’s the difference between someone making a free game and releasing it for free where them not doing it because they suck at art, this is probably one of the least evil uses of AI I’ve seen in a while.

    • go $fsck yourself@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      There are other issues with using AI other than laziness or lack of funds for an artist. Especially if you’re using a corporate run AI, instead of a self-hosted model.

      I would prefer if they just included a small bit that explains “this art was generated using X model run on Y servers” or something like that.