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“Dimension 20’s” Lore Keeper, Skye Smith, on Why AI Can’t Replace Her

Under the stadium lights of Madison Square Garden, people cheered for Brennan Lee Mulligan, the game master of “Dimension 20”, and the tabletop roleplaying game show’s most famous face.

The show, run by Dropout — a media company spun off from the former CollegeHumor — involves Mulligan or other game masters weaving a fantastical tale of adventure and magic.

Mulligan wouldn’t have been able to do hours long games, at stadiums and in the show’s recorded form without Skye Smith, his lore keeper.

When Business Insider asked Smith to sum up her work, she described herself as the “Google, or Wikipedia, for ‘Dimension 20.'” She’s in charge of knowing the show’s encyclopedic, sprawling history, from timelines to factoids, and making sure her boss and his players keep it all straight, too.

The game master’s right-hand

Shows like “Dimension 20” and “Critical Role” need lore keepers for one reason: There’s just too much to remember. “Critical Role” has streamed multi-year tabletop games for hundreds of episodes, totaling thousands of hours.

While “Dimension 20” has shorter seasons, the game master leans on an assistant to ensure he gets the plot points and facts right.

“A filming day for me is very different than a regular 10-to-6 workday. It’s always going to be at least a 12-hour workday. I get to set the same time as our GM, Brennan. And then I stay until pretty much the very last person has left set,” Smith said.

“Dimension 20” films multiple episodes a day, and she and Mulligan have a “consistent Slack” going as they film.

Smith takes notes on the ongoing game, then fields questions called to her off-camera.

Staying organized

To keep track of evolving lore, Smith uses Airtable for most of her notes.

She also uses some good old-fashioned sticky notes.

“I usually have a printout of either the materials that they use at the table for the game that we play, or a visual of the world we’re in,” Smith said. “And I always have a notebook.”

Beyond lorekeeping, Smith is involved in the creative process for “Dimension 20’s” new seasons, including pitching and ideation.

“So I get to know what’s cooking really early,” Smith said.

The AI question

When asked whether her job would be endangered by AI note-takers, Smith said that her work revolves around listening, spotting human error, and understanding the lore of the fantasy world being made in real time.

“A big part of this job and why it’s important has to do with human error,” Smith said. And so fixing ‘errors’ with a machine would never work because what you need is another human set of eyes who knows the pitfalls of making something creative, knows where the weak spots are, and you just can’t train an electronic artificial intelligence in the same way that you can train human intuition.”

Smith added that she enjoys the “hard parts” of her job that other people might find taxing or that they might look to robots to help with, such as taking “hours and hours of notes.”

“It’s a double-layered answer — it would never be able to do it as well as I do,” Smith said. “And then on the other hand, given the environmental effects of AI, it wouldn’t even be worth it to try.”

How to get the gig

Smith worked her way up to lore keeper from an entry-level role as a production assistant in 2023, then jumped at the chance to work on “Dimension 20” when Dropout offered her the role.

Her career highlights include working behind the scenes at the crew’s Madison Square Garden show and getting to showcase her own writing.

“This wasn’t where I initially thought I would end up, but if I had remained singularly focused on the things that I thought I wanted, I would never have gotten here,” she said. “The closest advice I can give to recreating the path I got that got me here is just do the work that you love, do it well, and then watch the opportunities that come from that.”

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