• Hasbro is turning Optimus Prime and Mr. Potato Head into AI-power

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Saturday, June 06, 2026 05:15:24
    Hasbro is turning Optimus Prime and Mr. Potato Head into AI-powered voices which is one sure-fire way to ruin our childhood memories

    Date:
    Sat, 06 Jun 2026 04:00:00 +0000

    Description:
    Hasbro's new AI character initiative may be a smart licensing strategy, but transforming iconic childhood figures into endlessly available conversational AI could weaken the very magic that made them beloved in the first place.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================Copy link Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Pinterest Flipboard Threads Email Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter Hasbro has joined the growing list of companies convinced that everything people love should eventually become an AI product . The toy giant has announced Sixth Wall, a new AI
    studio designed to remake its famous characters into interactive AI experiences in partnership with AI voice platform ElevenLabs.

    Hasbro has created a whole new category of product approval for the project called Behavioral Licensing, which aims to preserve not just how characters look, but how they think, speak, and interact. Optimus Prime, Megatron, Cobra Commander, Mr. Potato Head, and characters from Clue are among those being transformed into AI-powered personalities for everything from customer
    service to games and theme park experiences. Hasbro says it wants to provide an authorized alternative to the countless unofficial AI character clones already appearing online, and this is a logical solution to the unauthorized AI versions of fictional characters already spreading across the internet
    with wildly inconsistent results. Rights holders naturally want more control over how their intellectual property is used, and Hasbro deserves credit for trying to compensate performers while establishing guardrails around
    character behavior. Latest Videos From Watch full video here:

    At the same time, this announcement feels like a textbook example of technology companies mistaking possibility for demand. A great many AI projects are being built because they can exist rather than because anyone is actively waiting for them. The arrival of AI-powered Mr. Potato Head lands squarely in that category. The difference between a character and a chatbot One of the defining assumptions of the AI boom is that conversation automatically improves everything. Search engines, productivity software, and anything else that can hold an LLM are AI chatbots now. But beloved fictional characters and chatbots serve very different purposes. One exists to tell stories. The other exists to answer prompts. There's overlap, but it's hardly identical. You may like Why are your favorite celebs selling their voices to this AI company? ChatGPTs adult mode being shelved reveals a much bigger AI problem Masters of the Universe director has his say on AI use in the entertainment industry

    Optimus Prime may have been created to sell toys to kids through cartoons,
    but he became popular because the writers, artists, and performers behind the character transcended that commercial origin in the eyes of fans.

    AI systems change that relationship. Written scripts are replaced with an endless stream of dialogue. The character shifts from a hero in a story to an overly available Cameo service . The legendary Autobot has nothing better to do than make small talk. Get daily insight, inspiration and deals in your inbox Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more. Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from
    us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

    Mr. Potato Head is an even stranger example because his appeal was never
    built around conversation in the first place. The toy became a classic
    because children could rearrange it endlessly, creating goofy faces and ridiculous combinations that felt unique every time. Its charm came from imagination and physical play, not from hearing the character deliver an unlimited stream of AI-generated dialogue.

    The character has survived for generations precisely because he is simple. A plastic potato with detachable eyes, ears, and a mustache does not need to be a witty conversationalist, no matter what the Toy Story movies claim. The
    more Hasbro tries to transform that simplicity into a sophisticated digital experience, the greater the risk that it forgets why people loved the toy in the first place. Fan disservice Plenty of AI developers have become
    fascinated with accessibility and personalization while overlooking the
    appeal of limitation. Some experiences are meaningful precisely because they are not available every minute of every day. A favorite character benefits from a little distance and, for kids especially, an imaginary personal idea
    of the character. What to read next 39% of new podcasts are generated by AI but I won't be listening 'I dont like it when doomers are out scaring
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    There is also a practical issue. AI models remain surprisingly unreliable custodians of fictional personalities. They can mimic tone, vocabulary, and mannerisms impressively well, but they often drift in subtle ways. A sentence here and a response there can slowly transform a recognizable character into
    a generic approximation of itself.

    Fans are sensitive to those differences. The details matter because the details are often the entire point. Hasbro says it is using authorized source material, working with professional performers, and focusing initially on experiences aimed at people aged thirteen and older. Compared with many AI initiatives announced over the past two years, this effort appears unusually thoughtful.

    Initial commercial value, though, may be an illusion if it reduces the emotional value of these characters. People rarely revisit childhood
    favorites because they want a more practical version of them. Expanding those characters into endless AI interactions risks diluting some of what made them special in the first place.

    Supporters of AI character experiences will argue that every new technology inspires similar concerns. History certainly provides examples. Television
    did not destroy books, video games did not destroy movies, and streaming did not destroy television. New formats often coexist with old ones.

    The difference is that most successful entertainment technologies created new experiences rather than endlessly extending old ones. Sixth Wall is betting that consumers want deeper and more persistent relationships with familiar characters.

    Hasbro may discover a successful business in AI personalities. It may even create a few genuinely entertaining experiences along the way. But maybe invest the money in new and better quality toys and stories instead. Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. The best business laptops for all budgets Our top picks, based on real-world testing and comparisons

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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/ai-platforms-assistants/hasbro-is-turning-optimus-pr ime-and-mr-potato-head-into-ai-powered-voices-which-is-one-sure-fire-way-to-ru in-our-childhood-memories


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