It doesn’t seem like they have in depth conversations about the topic you input. Based on how they showed it here, they just have a general discussion about it using universal phrases that can fit basically any topic.
zaadiqoJoseph on
Are the Mii voices
Like a text to speech thing
Where Nintendo has a voice actor say a bunch of random stuff.
Like how Siri works
Susan Bennett, the original voice of Siri in the United States, recorded thousands of phrases, words, and sentences in a process that lasted for an entire month.
ShellyT98 on
They’re not gonna talk about it, they are just gonna use the thing you tell them as a word in the dialogue. Example. Their dialogues would be like:
“Wow I really like [insert thing you prompted]”
“Yeah, I have a book talking about [insert thing you prompted]”
“I don’t really like [insert thing you prompted], it scares me”
They don’t understand what you promp, but use that thing as a word(s). I’m going on a speculation and say that they will not understand if the prompt should be referred as a IT, HE, SHE or THEM
EpicQuackering437 on
I’m going to create Alex Jones and you can’t stop me.
Epic-Gamer_09 on
Ironically Nintendo is one of the biggest examples of not putting text filters in single player games, so probably
6 Comments
The UK version got “horror movies”
It doesn’t seem like they have in depth conversations about the topic you input. Based on how they showed it here, they just have a general discussion about it using universal phrases that can fit basically any topic.
Are the Mii voices
Like a text to speech thing
Where Nintendo has a voice actor say a bunch of random stuff.
Like how Siri works
Susan Bennett, the original voice of Siri in the United States, recorded thousands of phrases, words, and sentences in a process that lasted for an entire month.
They’re not gonna talk about it, they are just gonna use the thing you tell them as a word in the dialogue. Example. Their dialogues would be like:
“Wow I really like [insert thing you prompted]”
“Yeah, I have a book talking about [insert thing you prompted]”
“I don’t really like [insert thing you prompted], it scares me”
They don’t understand what you promp, but use that thing as a word(s). I’m going on a speculation and say that they will not understand if the prompt should be referred as a IT, HE, SHE or THEM
I’m going to create Alex Jones and you can’t stop me.
Ironically Nintendo is one of the biggest examples of not putting text filters in single player games, so probably