Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Tom’s Hardware
Tom’s Hardware
Technology
Christopher Harper

Counter-Strike's Dust II runs purely within a neural network on an RTX 3090 — performance is disappointing at only 10 FPS

Eloi Alonso and Adam Jelley's "DIAMOND" diffusion world model used to simulate Counter-Strike: Global Offensive gameplay on series staple map, Dust II.

In a move showing yet further progress in the field of generative AI being capable of simulating existing (copyrighted) games, the "DIAMOND" Diffusion for World Modeling model has now been showcased simulating Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, trained and played off a single RTX 3090 (at 10 FPS). One of the people working on the project, Eloi Alonso, posted footage of this CS:GO "world model" being run in a thread on Twitter, including plenty of disclosure on the involved glitches, of which there are many.

While a responsible enthusiast should be critical of the implications posed by AI technology implemented in this way, it's undoubtedly an impressive technical achievement on the part of Eloi Alonso and the rest of the people who worked on the "DIAMOND" diffusion model to effectively "port" CS:GO to AI by training a single GPU with enough Dust II Deathmatch footage to "teach" the diffusion model the game. The glitches are all fascinating in their way, too, showing us some of the logistical shortcomings of generative AI technology that is still ultimately guessing correct player/game behavior, not running it within a game engine.

Of the glitches showcased by Alonso, one of the most interesting by far relates to jumping. Players can jump infinitely within this AI simulation of CS:GO because the model views pressing the button as having a fixed reaction (moving on the Y axis by a set amount) rather than being ruled by Source Engine's gravity or collision detection. This also allows for other strangely dreamlike "hallucinations," including weapons morphing in certain lighting conditions and even the ability to phase or teleport through particular walls.

Instead of roughly simulating a GPU's dream of Counter-Strike, you can install Counter-Strike 2 for free on Steam today and play it well above 60 FPS on gaming GPUs much cheaper than an RTX 3090. But as a technical demo for the RTX 3090's onboard AI hardware training and running a diffusion model all on its lonesome, this "port" of CS:GO's Dust II into a diffusion model is still quite enjoyable. Hopefully, the game industry doesn't make the absolute worst of these technical advancements in morally, legally, and ethically dubious ways.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.