Jensen Huang Says He Doesn't Love “AI Slop” After the DLSS 5 Backlash
Original: Nvidia CEO says "I don't love AI slop myself" after giving Resident Evil Requiem's Grace a DLSS 5 makeover that was swiftly labelled AI slop View original →
r/pcgaming pulled in one of the sharper follow-ups to this week's DLSS 5 debate. GamesRadar reported on 2026-03-24 that Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told Lex Fridman he understands why players reacted negatively to the company's recent demonstrations and said he does not love “AI slop” either.
The context is important. Nvidia used examples from games such as Resident Evil Requiem and Starfield when it unveiled DLSS 5, and those showcase clips were quickly criticized online for looking overly filtered or generically beautified. The backlash was less about frame generation as a category and more about what people thought Nvidia was signaling as acceptable art direction.
Huang's defense was that critics got the wrong impression about how the technology would actually be used. He said people seemed to think shipped games would be post-processed after the fact, whereas DLSS is integrated into the artist's workflow. In his telling, generative AI is a tool the artist can choose to use or not use, not an unavoidable visual layer pasted over every final build.
That distinction matters for PC gaming because the argument around DLSS 5 is not just technical. It is also about authorship. If AI-assisted rendering remains under developer control, Nvidia can position the feature as a production aid. If players think it turns finished games into homogenized marketing demos, every future showcase starts from a trust deficit.
Huang's quote does not end the underlying dispute. Skeptical players are still reacting to what Nvidia chose to present, and presentation is part of the product story whether or not those exact visuals ship. But his comments do signal that Nvidia recognizes the backlash as more than a throwaway meme cycle.
The next real test will be how DLSS 5 appears in released games and how clearly developers explain what is artist-authored, AI-assisted, optional, or platform-specific. Until then, Huang's remark matters because it acknowledges the core complaint in plain language instead of pretending the audience only misunderstood the technology.
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