Many of you will recall an April Fools’ joke announcement of G-Assist by Nvidia in 2017. Joking around, they claimed that you could have an AI helper play your game while you hurried to get your pizza.
Seven years later, Nvidia may finally bring game creators and owners of RTX GPUs to life with G-Assist, a genuine demo of a potent GeForce AI helper.
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While the G-Assist project is still merely a technical demonstration, it offers a quick look at how an AI assistant could help you navigate PC games and even set up your gaming PC to run at the best possible settings for you.
How Nvidia’s G-Assist, the next-generation chatbot, will operate
In a demo, Nvidia demonstrates G-Assist in the video game ARK: Survival Ascended, responding to voice inquiries such as “What is the next weapon in the game, and where can I find the materials to build it?”
The assistant can even comprehend what is happening on the screen while you play to help you advance in a game and adjust itself based on your skill point total.
Microsoft demonstrated last month how its AI helper Copilot may lead players through a Minecraft game like this one.

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Additionally capable of optimizing and modifying PC settings, Nvidia’s AI assistant can also provide PC latency graphics and frames per second of the previous 60 seconds.
For instance, if your monitor can handle 240 Hz, but you’re only playing at 60 Hz, it can scan your system and detect that. Inquire about suggestions for enhancing game performance, hitting the 60 frames per second performance target, or even overclocking the GPU.
Although there is a lot of potential, we still have the right to doubt the hype surrounding artificial intelligence until G-Assist is a playable program (generative AI is prone to errors).
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