On Reddit today, someone posted what they claimed was a leaked screenshot from an upcoming Starfield cinematic trailer. They deleted the post, but that's the image above. If it were a genuine leak, it'd be a pretty crappy one, but it isn't even that.
The image was created with the Midjourney image generator, according to another Reddit poster(opens in new tab), whose proof is a clear, unedited version of the image which they credit to «Jessyplayford.»
The «leaked» image was made to look like a blurry off-screen photo—all good videogame leaks are snapped while jogging by someone's monitor—and the Jodie Foster-esque character looks kind of like a character who appeared in the 15-minute Starfield gameplay reveal last year. Aside from looking like it could be a genuine Starfield image, what made the fake leak somewhat convincing is that it didn't actually reveal anything. It's easy to accept that something's a leak if nothing of consequence was actually leaked.
This is surely only the start of a new kind of shenanigans. Making fake gaming leaks is an internet pastime—Half-Life 3 has been a particularly popular target—but it used to take a good amount of skill and effort to pull off something convincing. Now it takes little of either, meaning we could soon be inundated with this nonsense. I'm already pining for the days when hoaxers had to really try to fool people—back when lying was an honest day's work!
We already had to approach internet media skeptically, but it was at least reasonable to sometimes think: «This must be real, because why would anyone put so much effort into faking something so stupid?» Not anymore. The other day, someone made it sound like Todd Howard promised hardcore sex in The Elder Scrolls 6 just for
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