Paper detail

Generative Adversarial Network Rooms in Generative Graph Grammar Dungeons for The Legend of Zelda

Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) have demonstrated their ability to learn patterns in data and produce new exemplars similar to, but different from, their training set in several domains, including video games. However, GANs have a fixed output size, so creating levels of arbitrary size for a dungeon crawling game is difficult. GANs also have trouble encoding semantic requirements that make levels interesting and playable. This paper combines a GAN approach to generating individual rooms with a graph grammar approach to combining rooms into a dungeon. The GAN captures design principles of individual rooms, but the graph grammar organizes rooms into a global layout with a sequence of obstacles determined by a designer. Room data from The Legend of Zelda is used to train the GAN. This approach is validated by a user study, showing that GAN dungeons are as enjoyable to play as a level from the original game, and levels generated with a graph grammar alone. However, GAN dungeons have rooms considered more complex, and plain graph grammar's dungeons are considered least complex and challenging. Only the GAN approach creates an extensive supply of both layouts and rooms, where rooms span across the spectrum of those seen in the training set to new creations merging design principles from multiple rooms.

preprint2020arXivOpen access
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