- Nvidia’s project G-ASSIST is now live in the Nvidia app
- It uses text and voice messages to optimize games, control hardware and give diagnostics
- The tool is still experimental where functionality is often updated
Nvidia’s Nifty Project G-Assist is now available in the official NVIDIA app that brings the AI-driven assistant to everyone, a year after the technical demo first appeared. Yes, it’s for real this time, unlike April 2017’s Fools video, where it was a USB device shaped like a GTX 1080.
Nvidia’s G-Assist can be used by all RTX graphics card users, and it uses these GPUs’ Tensor Kernes (AI-Kernes) to perform a variety of services, such as optimization of gaming and system settings, in-depth diagnostic reporting in the game and answering questions.
Like some of the best AI tools, such as Google Gemini and Chatgpt, Nvidia’s G-Assist can answer voice and text recordings in the form of questions; You ask it to do things for you that relate to games and it tries to perform your commands.
Nvidia’s official video reviews what is possible with its new assistant and how it interacts with compatible hardware and software. In the clip we see a text prompt inputted that asks how frame generation works that delivers a brief answer. Similarly, it is asked by the voice whether GPU’s drivers are up to date and G-Assist controls the current driver installed. It works with a small language model built on a tailor -made API.
It is likely that more interesting than its diagnostic and optimization features is how G-Assist interacts with hardware. With support for third-party APIs from companies such as Logitech, Corsair and MSI, it is able to not only control lighting through a text or voice prompt, but also your fans speed/performance.
We later see how Nvidia G-Assist optimizes rust for the “best image quality” that happens almost instant and then the game starts with a voting command. Obviously, experimental technology is in its infant now, but we could see wider use as Team Green elaborates on its function kit and compatibility with more hardware and software in the future.
A nice new use for AI in games
While Nvidia’s project G-Assist does not seem to be something really revolutionary, the technique offers a few practical shortcuts to optimize your games (and system hardware) with only a few lines of text or voice commands. Obviously, it won’t work flawlessly with every game or a piece of hardware, but it’s an interesting new way to streamline life quality features.
Nvidia’s new app is leagues better than the previous GeForce experience (which we were excited to see). Everything to make installation of drivers, optimization of games right from the launcher, and having your hardware cross over effectively is right of us. As an experimental feature, you can root with risk -free. It is worth seeing what it can do, although its functionality can largely work without problems in the big schedule with things.