
Godot Draws Clear Line on AI-Assisted Contributions
Godot Draws Clear Line on AI-Assisted Contributions
Godot enforces strict copyright compliance for all AI-assisted contributions under MIT license rules.
Highlights
- Godot allows limited use of AI in contributions but prohibits fully AI-generated submissions.
- The project enforces strict copyright compliance under MIT license rules for all AI-assisted code.
- AI-disclosed pull requests account for only 1.27% of merged contributions in recent release cycles.
Godot has clarified its stance on generative AI (GenAI) after concerns emerged over whether the open-source engine was becoming too permissive with AI-assisted code contributions. The engine’s maintainers say that limited use of AI is still allowed, but fully AI-generated submissions are still prohibited under its contribution rules.
The discussion escalated after veteran maintainer, Rémi Verschelde, addressed criticism directly on Bluesky, stating that Godot “isn’t vibe-coded” and does not accept contributions that fall into that category. He also stressed that the Godot Foundation and its maintainers remain “fairly critical” of AI usage and have no plans to build AI features into the engine itself.
Godot AI Policy Sets Limits on Contributor Submissions
Godot’s pull request guidelines discourage the use of GenAI and explicitly ban contributions made entirely through tools such as Claude, ChatGPT, or Grok. However, the policy does permit narrower use cases such as debugging, translation, information lookup, and single-line code completion.
Contributors are required to disclose any use of AI in their submissions.
The rules also place heavy emphasis on copyright. Contributors are required to verify that any AI-assisted code or external material complies with licenses compatible with Godot’s MIT framework. Maintainers also warn that “source-available” code from proprietary engines such as Unreal Engine or Unity cannot be reused or adapted.
Verschelde stated that every pull request must be tested, understood, and defended by the person submitting it. “Any slop PR is automatically rejected,” he said, adding that AI disclosures lead to deeper scrutiny because maintainers “mechanically trust it less.”
AI-Assisted Pull Requests Remain a Small Share of Godot’s Workflow
The engine merged 47 pull requests with AI disclosures out of 3.7K across its last two release cycles, or roughly 1.27%. Verschelde reported that some of those were his own experiments to understand the technology better.
Godot is now preparing a stricter AI policy after maintainers reported a rise in “AI slop” submissions earlier in 2026. The move reinforces the project’s position that human accountability remains central to development.

Author
Probaho Santra is a content writer at Outlook India with a master’s degree in journalism. Outside work, he enjoys photography, exploring new tech trends, and staying connected with the esports world.
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