The demoscene is a culture of coders, artists, and musicians who push their selected (usually retro) computer hardware to its limit creating music and videos to demonstrate its capabilities. This model has been trained on stills from the legendary 1992 demo State of the Art created by Norwegian collective Spaceballs. Check out the video and marvel that it was made for the Amiga 500, a computer with 1 megabyte of RAM and a 0.007 GHz processor.
Used at higher strengths, this LoRA will silhouette an image's subject behind a low-res layer of colours and lines. Combined with ControlNet, the effect can be directed at a composition's background, or target on particular textures and materials. At lower strengths, the effect is best described as "rainbow cyberpunk".
Two versions of this model are available: one trained against the base SD1.5 model, and one trained against a specialised cartoon-style checkpoint. The former will work well with base SD1.5 and photorealistic checkpoints, the latter will work better for Western animation and anime style checkpoints.
Description
Works best for anime or Western animation styles
FAQ
Comments (4)
O, demoscene! I plan to create ascii-art lora
Great idea, I love ASCII art. I look forward to seeing your model.
It's obviously been trained on the amiga demo "State Of The Art" by Spaceballs. Are there other demos in there as well?
It is just State of the Art. I've updated the description to give credit to Spaceballs. I was nervous to identify the source originally because I know AI art is very controversial everywhere at the moment, but the fair thing to do is to give credit.







