claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.027
Jersey Jack and artist confirm limited AI use in Harry Potter, citing misinformation and compositing rationale.
Jesper Abels used AI tools 'sparingly and intentionally' for visual blending and creating harmony between complex assets in Harry Potter artwork
high confidence · Direct statement from Jesper Abels posted to Tilt Forums and reported by Kineticist
Jack Guarnieri interpreted 'using AI' narrowly as fully AI-generated artwork, not compositing tools, which is why he initially denied AI use
high confidence · Follow-up quote from Jack Guarnieri: 'To me, being accused of Using AI means that someone told ChatGPT Create artwork for a Pinball machine'
JJP leadership was not involved in the technical art pipeline and lacked knowledge of specific AI tool usage
high confidence · Jesper Abels statement: 'The leadership team at Jersey Jack Pinball was not involved in the technical art pipeline'
Jack Guarnieri suggested that games with AI-art may become more valuable due to rarity, implying potential artwork changes in future production
medium confidence · Jack's comment: 'Seems it was overlooked by everyone. It's funny but those games may end up being more valuable as they are rare.'
Jesper Abels uses a compositing process similar to his 'Solar Script' project (2021) that builds on photography rather than pure generation
medium confidence · Kineticist's analysis of Abels' Behance portfolio and comparison to Solar Script methodology
JJP's core customer base prioritizes gameplay and enjoyment over artwork production process concerns
medium confidence · Jack Guarnieri stated: 'the AI issue isn't important to JJP's customers. That they just want to get their game and play it'
No customers have refused delivery of Harry Potter machines despite the AI art controversy
high confidence · Jack Guarnieri: 'nobody has refused the game'
“AI tools were never used to generate full illustrations or replace the hand-crafted work, but rather as part of a much larger creative process that also included hand-drawing, painting, digital composition, and licensed assets.”
Jesper Abels @ n/a — Core clarification of AI tool scope; artist's official position distinguishing between generation and enhancement
“To be transparent, we did use AI tools sparingly and intentionally, as a way to support the visual blending of certain elements and create harmony between complex assets.”
Jesper Abels @ n/a — Explicit confirmation of AI use with stated purpose; addresses the central controversy
“To me, being accused of 'Using AI' means that someone told ChatGPT 'Create artwork for a Pinball machine, cabinet and playfield'. That didn't happen, so my reply to you was we didn't use AI.”
Jack Guarnieri @ n/a — Explains apparent contradiction between 'no AI' claim and actual AI tool usage; reveals definitional mismatch
“I think art is about proposing something that makes you feel something meaningful... This is a cry for help. From a digital visual artist that tries to make honest art and is just at a loss for what to do.”
Jesper Abels @ March 2024 (Bluesky) — Contextualizes Abels' frustration with AI commodification of artistic labor; suggests genuine creative struggle rather than casual misuse
“The people at Jersey Jack Pinball gave everything to this project. This wasn't just a job it was a passion project fueled by a deep respect for both the Harry Potter universe and the game of pinball itself.”
Jesper Abels @ n/a — Defense of JJP's intentions and team dedication; frames AI use as part of ambitious creative vision rather than corner-cutting
“It's a less-than-ideal creative QA process, if key members of the management team were not aware of the tactical details of how the technical art pipeline was managed and delivered.”
Kineticist (Colin) @ n/a — Analyst's critical assessment; identifies systemic QA/communication problem beyond the AI tool issue itself
business_signal: JJP may be planning artwork revisions for future Harry Potter production runs; early 'AI art' versions could become rarer and potentially more collectible
medium · Jack Guarnieri: 'those games may end up being more valuable as they are rare'; implies deliberate shift away from current artwork package
community_signal: Harry Potter AI art scandal ('AI-Gate') remains controversial with segment of community anxious about AI adoption in pinball and broader entertainment IP licensing; differs from JJP's core customer base which prioritizes gameplay
high · Kineticist: 'a segment of the pinball community' finds this 'animating'; Jack notes core customers don't care about process; Kineticist expresses personal worry about 'slippery slope'
community_signal: Kineticist conducted extensive follow-up reporting with direct interviews of Abels and Guarnieri; community analyst role demonstrating commitment to transparent investigation of industry controversy
high · Multiple direct quotes from interviews; Kineticist notes 'attempted a few more times to talk directly with Jesper with no response provided' before statement; detailed follow-up with Jack
design_philosophy: Jesper Abels pursued visual complexity over simplicity intentionally to deliver 'something that hadn't been done before' with 'unique, dynamic poses and compositions'; this ambition drove reliance on compositing and blending tools
high · Abels: 'I made the creative decision to pursue complexity over simplicity'; 'we wanted to deliver something that hadn't been done before'
mixed(0.35)— Kineticist's investigation is balanced but leans critical. While sympathetic to Abels' artistic struggle and accepting that Guarnieri likely wasn't intentionally dishonest, the analyst is deeply concerned about industry implications, transparency failures, and the erosion of human creativity in commercial work. The tone is measured but worried about precedent-setting.
web_scrape · $0.000
“AI will never be able to replicate Jack Guarnieri, his lived experiences, or his expertise. At best it can provide a cheap, hollow mimic. The nuance. The perspective. The humanity. That's what people want to hear from, connect with, and understand.”
Kineticist (Colin) @ n/a — Philosophical statement on the deeper anxiety driving the controversy; speaks to authenticity and human connection in creative work
“It's funny but those games may end up being more valuable as they are rare.”
Jack Guarnieri @ n/a — Suggests JJP may change artwork in future runs; implies market opportunity in early 'AI art' versions becoming collectible
licensing_signal: Harry Potter IP licensing at JJP did not require explicit disclosure or QA approval of AI tool usage in creative pipeline, suggesting gap in IP licensor oversight
medium · No mention of Wizarding World/IP holder approval of AI methodology; JJP had freedom to decide internally how to handle disclosure
market_signal: No customer refusals of Harry Potter machines despite AI art controversy; indicates community/collector acceptance of final product quality despite production process concerns
high · Jack Guarnieri: 'nobody has refused the game'; 'Everybody just wants the game. Once they get it, they love it.'
community_signal: Jack Guarnieri's humor and creative defensiveness when confronted with AI criticism; joked about using ChatGPT to answer questions; deflects to game quality rather than addressing process concerns
high · Guarnieri redirects repeatedly to game merits ('Have you played the game?', 'Did you see it won game of the year'); end exchange where he copy-pastes ChatGPT response
product_concern: QA process failure: JJP leadership unaware of AI tool usage in technical art pipeline despite using hand-drawn artwork as marketing claim; represents systemic communication breakdown between creative and management teams
high · Jesper Abels: 'The leadership team at Jersey Jack Pinball was not involved in the technical art pipeline'; Kineticist notes this represents 'less-than-ideal creative QA process'