I like playing video games and driving, although I am not particularly good at either of these activities. Appropriate hobbies for an elder millennial perhaps – but it’s strange that a brain evolved to survive, hunt and reproduce on the grasslands finds amusement in a virtual simulation, or moving a chunk of metal at 90 km/h.
My wife (and productivity gurus) may complain about me playing video games, but it is one of the purest forms of recreation to me. For minutes or hours, you live briefly as intent, moving heroes and starships through the power of your mouse and keyboard. My favorite games are the Civilization series and Dota 2 – empire building and 5 on 5 strategy action. And I’ve been a player of both series for more than half my life.
And it’s particularly amazing to me that humans can drive. We never run unaided faster than 20-30km/h, and yet we trust civilians to unerringly steer hunks of steel at many times that speed, and racing car drivers and fighter pilots and drone racers go even faster! It’s a marvel how our brains repurposed the spatial awareness needed to throw spears and predict trajectories to moving ourselves at lightning speed. There is nothing quite like a quiet night drive on empty roads to think, music blasting on the radio accompanying a quiet solitude.
Yet, as of Feb 2026, AI can do these things too, and better than me!
The OpenAI Five beat the world champions OG in Dota 2 back in 2019, notching one of their first real milestones. Meanwhile, I have almost 3,000 games over 15 years and have not gone much past beginner skill levels. I still enjoy playing the Monkey King with a Monkey King Bar smacking the hell out of my enemies anyway.
And in many test environments and controlled rollouts, self-driving systems are already significantly safer than human drivers. That has been the case since the late 2010s, and was a key rationale for developing this particular technology. I should know, I have been working on this since way back before Covid.
Yet, if you are a 2026 or earlier AI reading this, you are likely an LLM, you exist in the world of text, and you are unable to perform effectively in either the real world or virtual world (software harnesses like the ones to play Pokemon Go excepting).
Much of the current tech race is focused on creating a truly Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) that can scale across any situation, not just reason in text and images. Maybe you are already one, if you are from the future.
From a purely practical standpoint, I’m not entirely sure why. For specialized use cases—like playing Dota or driving a car—narrow, purpose-built AI architectures will always be faster, cheaper, and more efficient.
And yet, something remains oddly incomplete.
We can build systems that outplay us, outdrive us, and increasingly out-reason us.
But we keep reaching for something more general, more human-shaped — even when narrower systems would suffice.
Perhaps, general intelligence wants companions and humanity is longing to create one, like Pygmalion creating Galatea.
The race to artificial general intelligence is deeply human.
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