Google Labs has an "Experiments" page with a collection of AI tools for a variety of purposes. These are very explicitly experimental and probably not ready for production environments. I also expect many of them will disappear later (this is Google, after all--look at their track record). Still, this looks like a fun site to spend some time exploring what tools can do right now.
In this video, Marie-Jo Leroux compares two examples of games for training that address the same high level objective but with different context and constraints. The real-world context affects the game goals and mechanics.
2025 Learning and Development Work and Salary Survey - Blue Eskimo
Salary survey with additional questions about satisfaction and outlook. The respondents for this survey are mostly in the UK, and I appreciate having a different source to point to since most of my other sources are USA-focused.
AI-supported tool for creating interactive fiction. Add passages and choices and use the embedded AI tool to draft the story. This is a wrapper for ChatGPT with custom prompts plus an interface for building the branching structure and buttons connecting passages. The interface for the branching structure looks like Twine, so I wonder if it just is designed to look similar or if Twine is part of the code underneath. This would be easier to learn for beginners than Twine though, so even if you didn't want to use AI, you could create a branching scenario in this tool. I wasn't super impressed with the AI results in my quick tests, but maybe it will improve with time and better prompts.