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Jan 25, 2023 at 14:19 vote accept William
Jan 25, 2023 at 14:19 comment added William @Silvermidnight - I think it had concept and skill/attack names that sounded like they were probably originally in Chinese or were supposed to invoke that flavor. A few too many references to "heavenly", "dragon", "ultimate", and such.
Jan 25, 2023 at 14:17 comment added William @Adamant - I basically never trust ChatGPT on its own since it can be so very convincingly wrong... hence this question!
Jan 24, 2023 at 23:52 answer added FuzzyBoots timeline score: 4
Jan 24, 2023 at 23:31 comment added Silvermidnight About the "minimal cheaply translated Chinese novel flavor". Do you remember if this book Chinese or not? For example, most Chinese books translated into English have a reoccurring "gongzi" aka. "childe" appearing in them. Another one would be "lao shi" aka. "teacher/master".
Jan 24, 2023 at 23:26 comment added Adamant @Silvermidnight - I didn't think so. -1 for ChatGPT.
Jan 24, 2023 at 23:26 comment added Silvermidnight @Adamant I know 100% that this is not Soul Land because I am a fan of Soul Land. Tang San never had to escape from his dad, and there is no mention of a "Forest of Black and White" anywhere in Soul Land.
Jan 24, 2023 at 23:21 comment added Adamant Sometimes. But in the end it is a language model, not an ontological inference engine, to say nothing of a person, so it is only as good as other people have described the same thing in similar words in its training data, and it easily makes mistakes when something else is described in similar words. Does this look like what you have described? That is a description of the protagonist of Soul Land.
Jan 24, 2023 at 23:14 comment added William @Adamant - I'm aware of the limitations, but it's often proved useful for situations where you can describe a thing but don't know what it's called.
Jan 24, 2023 at 22:04 comment added Adamant ChatGPT is not a search engine, and you should not trust it to tell you information about obscure things. For instance, it happily tells me that "Telling New Mexico: A New History was written by F. Chris Garcia." He didn't write it, edit it, or contribute a chapter, but he was the president of the University of New Mexico for a whole year, and the book was published by the University of New Mexico Press a decade later, so....
Jan 24, 2023 at 21:52 history asked William CC BY-SA 4.0