Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 creative director Guillaume Broche has voiced stark concerns regarding the future of generative artificial intelligence in the gaming industry, describing the technology’s rapid trajectory as “a little scary.” Speaking in a recent interview on Konbini’s Video Game Club YouTube channel, the developer behind 2025’s breakout role-playing hit clarified that his studio, Sandfall Interactive, completely avoids using the technology for creative assets. Broche noted that relying on automated tools ultimately “takes away from the joy of creating things” that drives passionate development teams.
While the current technical hurdles of game design provide a temporary shield for human creators, Broche warns that a paradigm shift is inevitable. The creative director expressed anxiety over an impending future where the complex art of game creation is reduced to a simple automated process. “I think the day will come when we’ll be able to churn out a game in five seconds with a prompt,” Broche remarked during the interview, capturing a growing sentiment of unease that has spread across both independent and AAA studios.
This critique comes at a time when major publishers are increasingly looking toward machine learning to cut production timelines and overhead costs. However, the commercial and critical triumph of Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 stands as a strong counterargument to the algorithmic approach. Developed by a relatively small team at Sandfall Interactive, the turn-based JRPG surpassed traditional industry expectations through its meticulously crafted narrative and polished mechanics, proving that human-driven design remains highly lucrative.
Ultimately, Broche remains skeptical about whether software generated purely by artificial intelligence can capture the core essence of what makes a game truly memorable. While acknowledgment of the technology’s growing power is unavoidable, he questions the actual quality of the final product. “Will it be a good game? I hope not,” Broche concluded, emphasizing that the entire industry is currently wrestling with the exact same existential questions regarding authorship, creativity, and the preservation of human artistry.