logo
How AI helps push Candy Crush players through its most difficult puzzles

How AI helps push Candy Crush players through its most difficult puzzles

The Hill11-05-2025
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Players swiping their way through more than 18,700 levels of Candy Crush Saga might be surprised to learn they're solving puzzles designed with an assist from artificial intelligence.
The app that helped make gamers out of anyone with a smartphone uses AI to help developers create levels to serve a captive audience constantly looking for more sweets to squash. King, the Swedish video game developer behind Candy Crush, also uses AI to update older levels to help ensure players don't feel bored, stuck or frustrated as they spend time with the game.
Todd Green, general manager of the Candy Crush franchise, said using AI in that way helps free up developers' time to create new puzzle boards. It would be 'extremely difficult,' he said, for designers to update and reconfigure more than 18,000 levels without AI taking a first pass.
Within the video game industry, discussions around the use of AI in game development run the gamut. Some game makers see AI as a tool that can assist with menial tasks, allowing designers and artists to focus on bigger projects. AI, they say, can help build richer worlds by creating more interactive non-player characters, for example. But there are also those who strongly oppose the use of AI, or who see the tech as a threat to their livelihoods — be it as video game actors and performers, or as workers who help make games. Concerns over AI led game performers with the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists to go on strike in late July.
'We're not putting chatbots into the game. We're not putting AI-powered design experiences into the game for players directly to play with,' Green said, adding that the tech is not being used to replace game workers. 'Instead, we're trying to deploy AI on existing problems that we have in order to make the work of the teams faster or more accurate, and more accurate more quickly.'
In the United States, consumer spending on video game content increased to $51.3 billion in 2024, up from $49.8 billion in 2023, with mobile games accounting for about half of all video game content spending, according to data from the Entertainment Software Association trade group. Mobile is now the leading game platform among players aged 8 and older, the ESA says.
Candy Crush — first launched on Facebook in 2012 — is constantly updating. King recently released its 300th client version of the game. Gaming giant Activision Blizzard acquired King in 2016 for $5.9 billion.
The free-to-play game is in a unique position, said Joost Van Dreunen, author of 'One Up: Creativity, Competition, and the Global Business of Video Games.' Candy Crush is more than a decade old, boasts millions of users and caters to a 'ravenous set of players,' he said. Demand is so high for new content that it makes sense to use AI to offset the work it takes to create so many levels, Van Dreunen added.
'To supply that at scale, you absolutely can rely on a sort of artificial intelligence or generative AI to create the next set of forms,' he said. 'The thing about Candy Crush is that every level is technically a single board that you have to solve or clear before you can advance. With AI and the existing library of human-made boards, it makes total sense to then accelerate and expand the efforts to just create more inventory. People play more levels.'
King uses AI to target two separate areas: developing new levels and going back to older levels, in some cases, puzzles that are several years old, and reworking them to ensure they're still worth playing. On new levels designed for people who have played the game for a long time, the company wants to ensure the puzzles are fun 'on first contact.'
'That's hard for us to do, because we don't get the benefit of having many players test or play through the levels and give us feedback. We have to sort of try and pitch it right at first,' he said. 'There's a really important group for us in between people who maybe played before and perhaps took a break for a while, and then coming back because they saw or heard of or were curious about what might be new.'
Green said King uses AI as a behind-the-scenes assistant in the design 'loop' of the game, rather than as a tool that immediately puts something new in front of players.
'Doing that for 1,000 levels all at once is very difficult by hand,' he said. 'So the most important thing to understand here is that we are using AI as like a custom design.'
For most players, Green said, the fun in solving the puzzles lies in the 'up and down.' Levels aren't designed in order of difficulty. An easy level can follow a few difficult levels — or vice versa — to give the game a sense of variety. Leveraging AI means that instead of the team working on several hundred levels each week, they could potentially improve thousands of levels per week because they're able to automate the drafting of the improved levels, he added.
'We talk to players all the time,' he said. 'We also get the quantitative feedback. We can see how players respond to the levels… How easy are the levels? Do they get sort of stuck, or are they progressing in the way that we hope?'
To determine whether gamers and playing through the way the designers intended, King looks at several factors, including pass rate — how many times a player passes a level out of every 100 attempts — and how often a board is 'reshuffled,' or refreshed with all candies rearranged. Some metrics are also intangible, like whether a level is simply fun.
'It's also, to some extent, obviously subjective,' Green said. 'It's different for different people.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jury orders Elon Musk's Tesla to pay massive sum for fatal crash allegedly caused by Autopilot: 'Will send shock waves to others in the industry'
Jury orders Elon Musk's Tesla to pay massive sum for fatal crash allegedly caused by Autopilot: 'Will send shock waves to others in the industry'

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Jury orders Elon Musk's Tesla to pay massive sum for fatal crash allegedly caused by Autopilot: 'Will send shock waves to others in the industry'

A federal jury has determined that Tesla "bore significant responsibility" for a deadly crash in Florida involving Autopilot, an advanced driver assist system intended to reduce driver workload and traffic collisions, as reported by the Associated Press. The ruling comes as Tesla grapples with lagging sales, declining revenue, volatile stocks, damaged brand trust, and eroding consumer loyalty, with CEO Elon Musk's polarizing politics and public disputes playing a role in these struggles. What's happening? A Miami jury ordered Tesla to pay more than $240 million to the victims of a 2019 crash that killed 22-year-old Naibel Benavides Leon and seriously injured her boyfriend, Dillon Angulo. According to the AP, the jury ruled that because its Autopilot failed, Tesla was partially responsible for the crash even though driver George McGee was distracted by his cellphone. Brett Schreiber, the plaintiffs' lead attorney, argued that Tesla misleads drivers to believe its Autopilot is more capable of handling road situations than it is because other automakers use terms like "driver assist" and "copilot" to prevent overreliance on similar technologies. "Words matter," Schreiber said. "And if someone is playing fast and loose with words, they're playing fast and loose with information and facts." Why is this news worrying for Tesla? Teslas are generally among the safest cars around and offer long-term environmental perks and cost savings on energy and maintenance, like other electric vehicles. However, like any vehicle, they aren't perfect. The jury's verdict could further erode consumer trust in the brand at a time when Tesla is pivoting to AI and robotics to boost profitability. Already, Tesla's fight to keep crash data involving its Autopilot and Full-Self Driving systems private has raised eyebrows. The U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has also opened multiple investigations into the automaker after crashes involving several of its autonomous features. Do you think a majority of Americans will have EVs in 20 years? Absolutely Only in some states No way I'm not sure Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. In the latest case, the families of Leon and Angulo alleged Tesla lost or hid crucial evidence — a claim Tesla disputed as an honest mistake after evidence came to light, according to the AP. While similar cases against Tesla have previously been dismissed or settled out of court, the jury's $240 million verdict could set a precedent. "It's a big number that will send shock waves to others in the industry," Wedbush Securities financial analyst Dan Ives said. "This will open the floodgates," added car crash attorney Miguel Custodio, who wasn't involved with the federal case. "It will embolden a lot of people to come to court." What are Tesla's next steps? Lead defense attorney Joel Smith said Tesla warns drivers that it is their responsibility to stay alert and be ready to take over when using its Autopilot and FSD features, putting the blame on McGee for being distracted after dropping his cellphone, per the AP. For its part, Tesla said in a statement to the AP that it will appeal the jury's decision. "Today's verdict is wrong and only works to set back automotive safety and jeopardize Tesla's and the entire industry's efforts to develop and implement lifesaving technology," Tesla said. Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet. Sign in to access your portfolio

ATP partners with TikTok to capitalize on the rise of behind-the-scenes content
ATP partners with TikTok to capitalize on the rise of behind-the-scenes content

San Francisco Chronicle​

time7 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

ATP partners with TikTok to capitalize on the rise of behind-the-scenes content

NEW YORK (AP) — The newest popular influencer on TikTok's 'For You" page might be the scroller's favorite tennis player. At least, the ATP hopes so. The governing body of men's professional tennis announced Tuesday it will be partnering with TikTok to further develop tennis content and bolster engagement on the platform. The partnership is two-fold. One of its stated goals is player engagement, aimed at helping more ATP players build up followings on the platform and give tennis fans 'exclusive behind-the-scenes' access to the sport, according to a press release. Its other goal is the creation of the 'Tennis Creator Network,' an initiative that will help existing non-athlete creators create TikTok content at ATP tour events. 'This strategic content partnership with TikTok builds on current trends with our audiences, places ATP at the forefront of the intersection of culture and sport, and creates discoverable content that cuts through for both players and tournaments,' Andrew Walker, senior vice president of brand and marketing for the ATP, said in the release. Currently, only 20 of the ATP's top 100 players have a presence on TikTok. Some of those 20 have become verifiable stars on the platform — Carlos Alcaraz has 1.1 million followers, Novak Djokovic has 666,000 and Ben Shelton has 448,000, to look at the upper echelon. They share everything from behind-the-scenes looks at tournaments to clips of them mowing the lawn and learning calligraphy. The ATP TikTok account itself has nearly 600,000 followers. The partnership is an acknowledgement of a blazing trend in sports media — candid, behind-the-scenes content created by athletes. Its popularity and virality is on the rise, manifesting itself everywhere from TikTok accounts to podcast studios. In July, a pair of Minnesota Lynx players — Courtney Williams and Natisha Hiedeman, nicknamed 'The Studbudz' — amassed hundreds of thousands of views and followers after live streaming the entirety of WNBA All-Star weekend, parties and all. The duo have now turned the momentum into official merchandise and newfound stardom. Athlete-hosted podcasts, with an hour of casual conversation from star athletes, have also repeatedly become headline makers. 'New Heights' with Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce is an obvious one, but shows like Indiana Fever guard Sophie Cunningham's 'Show me something' have spiked similar engagement as their hosts offer candid insight into life beyond the game. The ATP is looking to tap into that surge in behind-the-scenes content with this partnership. ___

Commerce Secretary Lutnick says Intel needs to give government stake for CHIPS funding
Commerce Secretary Lutnick says Intel needs to give government stake for CHIPS funding

New York Post

time7 hours ago

  • New York Post

Commerce Secretary Lutnick says Intel needs to give government stake for CHIPS funding

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on Tuesday confirmed that the government wants Intel to cough up a 10% equity stake in exchange for nearly $8 billion in CHIPS Act funding approved by the Biden administration. Lutnick said the the stake would be a return on its 'investment' in the struggling chipmaker. 'We should get an equity stake for our money,' Lutnick told CNBC's 'Squawk on the Street.' Advertisement 3 Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick during a television interview at the White House in July. AP 'So we'll deliver the money, which was already committed under the Biden administration. We'll get equity in return for it.' The government does not want control of the company, he added. Advertisement Lutnick's comments came on the heels of a report Monday that President Trump was seeking a 10% stake in the company. 'The president wants to put America's needs first, both from a national security and economic perspective, and it's a creative idea that has never been done before,' White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said Tuesday in confirming that Lutnick was working on a deal. Intel declined to comment. Advertisement Shares of Intel jumped 7% on the prospect of the government bailing out the chipmaker. 'The stake would be a conversion of the grants and maybe increase the investment into Intel to help stabilize the company for chip production here,' Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CNBC. On Monday, Japanese firm SoftBank announced it would invest $2 billion in Intel, making it the fifth-largest shareholder, according to FactSet. Intel was awarded $8.5 billion in CHIPS Act funding under the Secure Enclave program, a national security initiative to make microchips for defense and intelligence applications. Advertisement 3 Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan delivers a speech at an exhibition in Taiwan in May. AP It was later slashed by more than $600 million to about $7.85 billion, but Intel still tops the list as one of the companies receiving the most federal funding. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company has also been awarded $6.6 billion to boost chip production at its Arizona facilities. 'The Biden administration literally was giving Intel money for free, and giving TSMC money for free, and all these companies just giving them money for free,' Lutnick told 'Squawk Box.' Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan met with Trump at the White House last week to clear the air over accusations of having financial ties to China. 3 Intel slowed its construction and now expects its first factory to start operations in 2030. Getty Images Trump had initially called on Tan to 'resign immediately' following a letter from Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) to Intel's board requesting information on the CEO's business dealings. Tan, who was born in Malaysia and grew up in Singapore, took the helm at Intel in March after the software giant ousted Pat Gelsinger following dismal earnings and several rounds of layoffs. Advertisement Intel has struggled financially in recent months and recorded an annual loss of $18.8 billion in 2024, its first such loss since 1986. The Trump administration has been making a series of moves involving US companies, including proposing to allow Nvidia to sell its H20 chips to China in exchange for the government receiving 15% of the company's sales of some advanced chips to Chinese businesses and offering a similar deal with Nvidia's smaller rival AMD. MP Materials said last month that the Defense Department will become its largest shareholder as part of a multibillion-dollar deal with the government to boost output of rare earth magnets.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store