It feels weird to me that on the before/after comparision they felt the need to zoom in on the “before” but not on the “after”.
Either both should have the magnifying glass or neither. This just makes it hard to see the difference.
There are more details in the fixed version too, e.g. an extra detailed dark line within right leg (tibia) that is not present in the original; where do these details come from?
The purpose of zoomed out comparison is to show the quality reduction of applying this tool. The purpose of zoomed in before picture is to show how a typical pixel misalignment. Aligned pixels can be easily imagined.
> The purpose of zoomed out comparison is to show the quality reduction of applying this tool.
Reduction? Shouldn't the tool be improving the quality of the image? If it is reducing the quality then why do it?
> The purpose of zoomed in before picture is to show how a typical pixel misalignment.
Okay, but how does this supposed "misalignment" look on the picture? Would I even notice it? If not, does it matter? Did they just zoom in, and draw a misaligned grid over the zoomed in image? Or the grid fault lines are visible in the gestalt?
> Aligned pixels can be easily imagined.
Everything can be easily imagined. Misaligned pixels can be imagined. They could just write "our processed images look better" and let me imagine how much nicer they are. The purpose of a comparison is to prove that they are nicer/better/crisper whatever they want to claim.
>Okay, but how does this supposed "misalignment" look on the picture?
People who are the target audience for this tool already know.
>Would I even notice it?
Yes.
>The purpose of a comparison is to prove that they are nicer/better/crisper whatever they want to claim.
They don't need to prove it to their target users. They already know the problem (for which several tools exist).
The way I see it, converting something to pixel art is akin to lossy compression or quantization. The goal is to retain as much detail as possible given the constraints.
The exact way that pixels are misaligned is a feature of the specific AI models that generated the almost-pixel art.