What I learned using AI to make maze art

When I started this blog series on AI image generators I said I wanted to answer some questions. After spending a full month using and working with a dozen text to image generators let’s see what I have learned. Here is the original post with the questions, and my added answers:

What do I hope to accomplish ?

  • See what the competition is. How good is the output.

The output was mixed. I did not find any generator who could actually make maze art if only because the current text to image generators can’t make a solvable maze. They can make maze and labyrinth inspired images that are wonderful. They just can’t be solved. I think this will be fixed just like “hands” were fixed.

  • Become more familiar with what AI image generators are capable of

It seems the standard is to generate 4 images from every prompt text you input, allowing you to pick the best. Many of them also have pre-selectable styles. Each site has a slightly different style and strengths. I found the sites I like to use and those I don’t.

  • Evaluate and compare the different sites to determine how well they create based on my prompts

As discussed in my previous post there are 4 sites that were better than the rest in my challenge ! Different prompts may mean slightly different results but I imagine the order would not meaningfully change much with new prompts. Some sites just work better than others.

  • Be inspired (hopefully)

Yes. So many interesting takes on my text prompts (many more terrible ones, but..). I think these sites are a good place to look for inspiration.

  • Answer: Can I compete with AI generated maze art ?

Right now, they cannot compete with the current quality of maze artists. The odd thing is that a standard program for computer programmers to write is an algorithm to create a maze. There are dozens of sites, many that I have reviewed before to do this. At some point an AI text to image will learn from these sites and I will need to come back to reevaluate this.

And some additional things I learned:

  • Asking for a famous building means you may not get the full building - usually the top is cut off for some reason.

  • Prompts are often ignored. Expect the AI’s to miss some things. It might be you and a bad prompt…it might be the AI. A few sites allow you to select an image to “start” with as inspiration. So if things aren’t quite what you want, keep manipulating an image until you get it right.

  • Sometimes you write a bad prompt. If you keep getting bad outputs on multiple websites, the problem is your writing. I would give the example I used for #7 “Make a maze of a slice of an orange in color” didn’t work. My bad.

  • It is best to not be looking for a specific look/image. Better to try a prompt and see what comes out. I cannot tell you how many times I have prompted “make a maze on the surface of the Death Star” because I knew it would be awesome and I have yet to be impressed. Here is one from StarryAI. It looks cool but is not what I wanted because I was expecting a specific look.

AI - make a maze on the surface of the Death Star

While this is the end of this blog series, I will continue to play around with AI generators and you can expect more content from me on the subject !