Coding Video Games With A Prompt? It Might Be Possible With Gemini 3.0
SMRTR summary
Google's Logan Kilpatrick sparked a weekend frenzy with a single tweet declaring "Everyone is going to be able to vibe code video games by the end of 2025" — curious timing, considering there are only two months left in the year.
The viral post from Google's AI Studio lead product manager has many interpreting it as a cryptic teaser for the company's anticipated Gemini 3.0 release. "Vibe coding" lets anyone create software through simple conversation with AI, no programming skills required.
Kilpatrick's timing wasn't accidental. Google quietly rolled out a redesigned AI Studio experience over the weekend, allowing users to build apps with a single prompt. The platform can now automatically select AI models and integrate capabilities like video generation and image editing.
The real game-changer appears to be a new Annotation Mode that lets users point to visual elements and request changes through natural language. Users can simply say "Make this button blue" or "animate the image from the left."
While Google hasn't confirmed Gemini 3.0 features, leaked demos suggest the AI can create functional clones of entire operating systems, hinting at unprecedented interface-building capabilities that could indeed make game development accessible to millions.
SMRTR provides this summary for quick context. The original article belongs to BGR.
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