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Chimera Painter .... A new app tool that transforms your drawings into imaginary creatures



Google has released a prototype of an artificial intelligence app called Chimera Painter that transforms your graphics into fictional creatures.

The team decided to build a complete fictional digital blackboard made up of 100 creatures where players gather different fictional creatures and make them fight.

The search giant has developed the Chimera Painter app to produce a collection of creatures for the card game, so that they can be merged together to produce new creatures very quickly.

The tool uses machine learning technology to create images based on user diagrams.

This type of use has become relatively common in machine learning, with Invedia doing so with landscapes, as did MIT and IBM with buildings.

Chimera Painter is operated via GAN generating new content by placing two neurons against each other to generate new images while identifying which artificially generated ones.

The tool's developers trained GAN generative antagonist networks across 10,000 samples of computer-designed creatures using 3D models provided via the Unreal gaming engine.

Each image is paired with a fragmented map that divides imaginary creatures into anatomical parts, such as claws, noses, legs, etc.

This method allowed new creatures to be generated by assembling different parts of the anatomical parts of the imaginary creatures.

Google believes the tool can be used to generate fictional creatures ready for video games.

The tool can be used to customize previously loaded designs, import ready-made images, or generate new images through the tool.

Chimera Painter is a digital artist's drawing brush that can reduce the amount of time it takes to create high-quality art without influencing artistic choice.

"We hope that the models of the GAN and Chimera Painter modules will inspire others to think differently about the technical line, and what one can generate when using machine learning as a painting brush," the app's developers wrote in a blogpost.

They added: The idea is to find a paint brush that helps the artist more than just a tool, and if programs like this become common, it may in the future reduce the time needed to produce high-quality art.

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