The beta for Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 is already stirring up controversy, and this time it has nothing to do with TTK or movement mechanics. A small widget tucked into the loadout screen called Gunny has players convinced Infinity Ward quietly slipped an AI chatbot into the game. The studio has pushed back hard on that claim, but the full picture is a bit more complicated.

Get 1-month GTA+ subscription with pre-order.
Pre-Order GTA 6 Now
What Gunny actually does
Gunny sits in the bottom right corner of the loadout screen and suggests weapon builds based on the attachments you have already unlocked. If you have a fresh weapon with nothing unlocked yet, it will tell you to keep leveling before it can help. Once you have enough attachments, it puts together a build for you automatically.
Here's the thing: that is not AI. It is a curated set of developer-made recommendations filtered through what is in your inventory. Think of it less as a chatbot and more as a smart auto-equip button with a personality attached to it.
The confusion kicked off when retired Call of Duty leaker TheGhostOfHope posted on social media claiming Infinity Ward had dropped an AI chatbot into the game to help players with loadouts. The post spread fast. Infinity Ward responded directly, stating: "Wrong (again.) Gunny is handcrafted by our developers, not AI. It recommends builds based on the attachments you've unlocked for each weapon."
That pointed "again" is a nod to a history of inaccurate leaks from the same account that Activision has publicly corrected before.
The AI question does not go away that easily
So Gunny is cleared. But Infinity Ward co-studio head Mark Grigsby confirmed in a group presentation that the team does use AI as a development tool. "We use whatever tools we have to enhance and help our developers to complete tasks on time," Grigsby said. "For the game, there's developmental things. We use whatever we can, whatever tools we can in development."
That is about as direct as a studio head gets on this topic. And it lines up with what is already publicly disclosed: MW4's Steam page carries an AI usage notice reading “Our team uses generative AI tools to help develop some in-game assets.”
This is not new ground for the franchise. Players flagged suspiciously low-quality cosmetics in both Modern Warfare 3 and Black Ops 6, and those suspicions were later validated when Valve's mandatory AI disclosure appeared on the Call of Duty Steam page. Black Ops 7 also drew criticism after what appeared to be AI-generated art in a Studio Ghibli-style calling card surfaced online.
The pattern here is consistent. Activision and its studios have been using generative AI for asset creation for at least a couple of years now, and each new title brings another round of player pushback when it surfaces again.
What this means for players heading into the beta
For players jumping into the MW4 beta right now, Gunny is a genuinely useful feature for anyone who does not want to spend time theory-crafting builds from scratch. It is not going to replace the deep attachment knowledge that competitive players bring to the all game modes meta, but for casual players or those returning to the franchise after a break, having a quick build suggestion without leaving the menu is a solid quality-of-life addition.
The broader AI-in-development story is worth watching as MW4 approaches its October 23, 2026 launch. Grigsby's comments confirm the studio treats AI as a standard part of its production pipeline, and the Steam disclosure means at least some in-game assets were generated with AI assistance. Whether that shows up as corner-cutting in cosmetics again is the real question players are sitting with.
For a full breakdown of what else is confirmed for the game ahead of launch, the MW4 release date and everything new guide has every confirmed detail on platforms, editions, and new modes.








