AI isn’t just something you chat with. It’s hunting you in your favorite game. It’s reading your college essays. And most people have no idea how sophisticated it’s gotten in both places.
AI PMCs in Tarkov PvE Scav Runs
When you load into a Scav run in Escape from Tarkov’s PvE mode, the game actively populates the map with AI-controlled PMCs. These aren’t just reskinned Scavs with better gear. They’re designed to behave like real players — patrolling routes, guarding high-value loot, flanking positions, and reacting to sound.
The Short Answer
Yes, AI PMCs exist in Scav run PvE. If something shoots at you with military precision from 80 meters while you’re looting, that’s probably an AI PMC — not a regular Scav.
How AI PMCs Actually Behave
Regular Scavs shout randomly, run in strange patterns, and miss shots that should hit. AI PMCs are different. They move with purpose. They use cover. They peek corners. They retreat when they’re losing. The behavioral gap is significant — and deliberately designed.
There are also differences between USEC and BEAR AI PMCs. USEC tend to be more aggressive toward Scav players — shorter trigger time, more active engagement. BEAR PMCs sometimes have different engagement ranges and voice triggers before going hostile. These behavioral differences are programmed responses tied to faction identity.
In the current 2026 meta, AI PMCs follow specific patrol routes or guard high-value loot areas like weapon crates, rare spawn rooms, and boss territories. Unlike PvP where real players often extract early, AI PMCs stay on the map for the full duration — which means the longer you play, the more likely you are to encounter them.
How to Spot an AI PMC vs. a Regular Scav
🟡 Regular AI Scavs
- Wear random civilian or mismatched clothes
- Rarely have helmets
- Move unpredictably
- Friendly to player Scavs unless attacked first
- Shout randomly and miss easy shots
🔴 AI PMCs
- Wear full military gear — plate carriers, helmets, tactical rigs
- Move with clear directional intent
- Engage immediately with higher accuracy
- Hostile to all Scavs on sight
- Use cover, peek corners, retreat when losing
One Honest Caveat
After a raid goes long, player Scavs sometimes loot PMC gear and put it on — which means a fully-geared figure in military clothes isn’t always an AI PMC. Read the movement patterns more than the gear. The post-raid screen will tell you what you actually killed.
The Scav Army Tactic — Using AI Against AI
🪖 Scav Army Flank Strategy
Because AI PMCs are hostile to all Scavs, you can use other AI Scavs as a distraction. If your Fence reputation is high enough, nearby AI Scavs will follow you when you use the “follow me” hand gesture or voice command.
- Lead a group of 3-4 AI Scavs toward a building held by AI PMCs
- The crossfire starts — AI Scavs draw aggression
- Flank from the side while PMCs are distracted
- Take down the PMC and walk away with high-tier gear
Modified Western rifles, heavy armor, specialized grenades — gear Scavs normally can’t access.
PvE Mode Settings — What You Can Control
In practice mode and co-op PvE, you can adjust AI presence before loading in. Toggle AI amount, AI difficulty, boss spawns, and weather/time randomization. In persistent PvE modes, AI PMCs spawn automatically. In offline practice, you control the parameters.
Co-op PvE Requirements
“Practice Co-op” mode requires owning The Unheard or Edge of Darkness edition, or purchasing the co-op expansion separately. No progress saves in practice mode, so you can disconnect without penalty.
Do UC Colleges Check for AI in Essays?
The short answer: Yes — but it’s not uniform across the system, and the details matter a lot depending on whether you’re applying for admission or submitting coursework as a current student.
How the UC System Handles AI Detection
The University of California is a network of 10 public research universities. Each campus sets its own academic integrity policies. There is no single system-wide rule. The answer depends entirely on which campus, which department, which course, and sometimes which individual professor.
| Campus | AI Detection Tool | Status |
|---|---|---|
| UC Berkeley | Turnitin (plagiarism only) | ✓ AI Detection Opted Out |
| UCLA | Turnitin (plagiarism only) | ✓ AI Detection Opted Out |
| UC San Diego | Turnitin (plagiarism only) | ✓ Disabled Spring 2025 |
| UC Irvine | Turnitin | ~ Instructor Discretion |
| UC Santa Cruz | Screening tools confirmed | ⚠ Active Screening |
| UC Davis / UCSB | Turnitin contracts | ~ Instructor Discretion |
The National Trend
The share of institutions actively using AI detection tools jumped from 38% to 68% between 2023 and 2024. By 2025-2026, many moved from optional to default — and students are rarely notified when this happens.
What About UC Admissions Essays (PIQs)?
The UC Application’s Statement of Integrity explicitly allows generative AI for readability and editing assistance. But the content and final written text must be the applicant’s own. Submitting a completely AI-generated answer is considered equivalent to academic dishonesty and can result in disqualification.
A personal insight question written by AI is not going to be very good, because it’s not going to teach us anything about the student. That can’t be generated by a machine, it really has to come from the student.
UC runs PIQ responses through plagiarism detection software. UC Berkeley’s law school programs prohibit AI entirely for applicants. UCLA’s law school has the same restriction. Even on campuses without automated tools, human admissions readers are increasingly skilled at spotting AI-assisted writing.
The Turnitin Problem
Turnitin is the most widely deployed AI detection tool in higher education. But its AI detection isn’t perfect. Lightly paraphrased or rewritten AI output frequently scores below the detection threshold. At the same time, highly stylized human writing can sometimes score as AI-generated.
The False Positive Reality
Turnitin admits to a ~4% sentence-level false positive rate. For a 500-word essay (≈25 sentences), that could mean 1+ sentences incorrectly flagged. International students and ESL writers see even higher rates — some studies show 60%+ false detections for non-native English speakers.
Several major public universities have moved away from AI detection tools entirely, citing reliability concerns. Vanderbilt, Yale, UT Austin, UC Berkeley, UCLA, and UC San Diego have all disabled or opted out of Turnitin’s AI detection feature.
What This Means for Students
- For admissions essays: Write your own content. Use AI to edit or improve readability if you want — but the ideas, experiences, and voice need to be genuinely yours.
- For coursework: Check your specific course syllabus. Many professors now include explicit AI use policies. If it’s not mentioned, ask.
- Keep drafts and brainstorming notes as evidence of your writing process.
- Policies change quickly. Always check your institution’s current academic integrity page directly — not what you read online six months ago.
- Self-checking with GPTZero is probably overcautious for most situations, but the underlying concern isn’t irrational.
The Bigger Picture
AI in gaming. AI in education. Two very different worlds but in both cases, the AI is more sophisticated than most people assume, and understanding how it actually works changes how you approach it.
In Tarkov, knowing how AI PMCs behave turns them from a terrifying unknown into a manageable threat you can even exploit. In college admissions, knowing exactly what the UC system checks and how gives you a clearer picture of where the real risks are.
Which Side Surprised You More?
The gaming AI that flanks and retreats like a real player? Or the college detection policies that vary campus by campus, professor by professor? Drop a comment I’m genuinely curious.