>>5838
At this point AI slop is but a tease, sadly.
It was fun for a while when the first models that did not look like man-made-horrors came out, but the novelty wore off and slop has little substance to it. AI contributions to the anthro cause are ambivalent as she slop makes visualising things ever more accessible, but also oversaturates the scene with lower quality slop being downright unpleasant to look at and higher quality slop keeping you guessing whether this or that artwork is human-made or not. It also steals from the artists and demoralizes some of them.
Maybe if text-to-video and image-to-video models worked well with anthros, that could have been a good niche to fill (would still step on animators' toes but there are very few of those as it is, they can't keep up with the demand and would probably still be well-regarded), but that doesn't seem to be the case as of now.
Then there are chatbots. Have you tried those? Did it a couple of times with a locally-hosted one and it felt an empty and insincere experience; would rather get called names by a real human schizo online than hear sweet little nothings from a yes-bot. Some people seem to enjoy talking to those nonetheless. To each their own.