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If We Can Built In It, We Will Come
January 30th 2004, 03:05 CET by Dumdeedum Making stuff in 3D is slow. Even once you've dragged yourself up a painful learning curve. Even once you've mastered a counter-intuitive interface. Even once you've adopted the Approved Way Of Doing Things. Even after all that it's still pretty damn sluggish. Maybe there's no replacement for time and effort, but it doesn't mean things couldn't be simpler. Epic and Valve both have full-time employees dedicated to working on their editors which means they have some of the best tools in the industry, but both are still largely mimicking the design ideas found in commercial 3D renderers. So why not use third party software? Why re-invent the torus when you could use something like Discreet GMax? Not having to learn a whole new editor for each and every game certainly helps, but 3D modeling software tends to suffer from the same problems as game editors so it's no great gain. How about the thought of walking through a huge warehouse, picking out doors, windows, tables, walls and suchlike to slot together a bit like a massive game of The Sims? It sounds nice, and after all, movie directors don't personally build each bit of furniture in their movies so why should game makers? But even without the copyright issues, prefab models have problems of varying levels of quality, clashing visual themes and incompatible filetypes. Of course this doesn't invalidate copy & paste entirely, people are unlikely to care too much if the pot plant they're throwing at NPCs looks uncannily like the one they were throwing at NPCs five minutes ago. But the never-ending-hell-of-yet-another-fucking-square-room that was Halo should stand as a dire warning to all that ctrl-v should be used carefully. Well, apart from RPG makers. There's a rather novel idea from the dirty, open-source hippies behind Cube. Editing levels is done in the game itself, you press E and it toggles to an edit mode where you can fly about pushing and pulling surfaces about (much like the old Duke3D editor) which is nice but not revolutionary, the clever part is they've tied it into the multiplayer code so you can have, for want of a better word, multiediting. Now I don't see public servers turning out works of levelling art, but a small team working simultaneously on different aspects of a map could theoretically boost creation time significantly. So how do we take a sad song and make it better? Can it be made better or is it just hard to model in 3D? Will Valve's tastefully orange placeholder textures solve everything? What's the future of level editing? Is it all Warren's fault? |
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Topic: If We Can Built In It, We Will Come
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I'm not disagreeing with you Hugin, there are always exceptions. But by and large normal bullets don't spark. Now if they're not made of copper or lead, then I imagine the chance of seeing a good spark is pretty good. But speaking of today's standard ammunition, one visible spark every few hundred rounds is pretty much a non-spark in my mind. I'm fighting terrorism by playing violent video games!
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Indeed with the no leaks in Unreal, mm.. But then, Unreal gets to content with invalid double-substracted brushes or something to that effect? Ah, whatever. No, it handles that. You can screw up your level in Unreal, granted, but it's a hell of a lot harder than in Quake engines. Usually people vertex edit their brushes and create non planar faces. The BSP compiler doesn't like that. "Cheap Garbage Disposal Can’t Handle Femur"
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gaggle: from that kind of perspective, it'd ultimately make sense from an animation perspective. Make your mesh, rig it, tweak some parameters and export it. Let the physics engine handle the animations fluidly, and with infinite variation, rather than playing a set sequence for specific events. Of course, you're going to take a nasty CPU hit... ....physics accelerators anyone? 9 years later you're the fat kid with his face pressed against the window of The Industry. - crash
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Guns in holywood also sound like canons, instead of the flat retort the usually generate, not to mention people firing handguns that in real life generate enough torque and kick back to dislocate wrists (desert eagle, Im looking at you). Its also amusing how every bad guy and his army has H&K MP5's when H&K keeps very tight controls on who it sells their firearms too. Do not go gently into that good night.
Old age should burn and rage at the close of day. Rage, rage against the dying of the light. |
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Thus my original "occasionally". |
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Apparently not, as a BBC (I think) reporter found out recently. He went through a third party, and was able to buy any amount of H&K kit 9 years later you're the fat kid with his face pressed against the window of The Industry. - crash
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I remember being angry at Richard Garriot for insisting on putting Newtonian physics into Ultima 8, because my machine ran it like ass. I didn't see why we needed to accurately model (well, close enough to accurately for the time) the physics of a door in a role playing game. Looking back on it today though, that was only so much smoke up our asses. Doors and stuff were probably treated just how they'd been in the previous Ultimas, where everything was assigned the same base physical attributes that could interact with another object attributes. Basically, this translated to If door str=10 and avatar str=20 + a magical axe of plus ten door smashing, he can smash this door. Oooooh, physics! I'm fighting terrorism by playing violent video games!
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And thus my not arguing with your "occasionaly" - I just posted a link that talked about the stuff. Sue me. I'm fighting terrorism by playing violent video games!
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.38 and 9mm rounds being fired sound like..not much. A cracking sound typically, sort of sharp but not very intimidating. A .45 has a deeper, flatter sound, but still not so much of a big deal. Sort of a banging cough. .357 and .44 are the only handgun rounds I've experienced that have a legitimately damn loud, booming, cannonlike sound. To the point where I find being around them when they're fired a lot unpleasant. This is assuming standard pressure rounds. +P and +P+ ammo are louder of course. The grip the Desert Eagle has on the imagination of Hollywood always amuses me. |
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I think it should be noted that The Stranger's pistols sounded very reasonable and realistic. Yay, Nocturne! I'm fighting terrorism by playing violent video games!
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Walking auto-animated ragdolls sets off my moon pony alarm. But yeah if possible to do it'd be pretty neat. I know Hitman uses a rather fancy combination, the animation* is canned, but part of the outfit can be physicsified. The hitman's tie is a simple example, and capes and shit some NPCs wore. You can accomplish a lot of things with blending as well. If you make a normal walk, and a limbing incapacitated walk, you should be able to blend between them and get all the shades inbetween. If one made enough of such blendable animations it seems possible to have characters that all move slightly apart. Not as sexy as purly dynamic-driven walking, shooting, etc. though. *refering to the walking, shooting, etc. The deathscenes are indeed full-body dynamic. |
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It should be noted that Nocturne was amongst the first games to feature a physical cloth simulation. Granted, it mostly just looked like The Stranger had a pack of coked up gerbils tearing around in his ass, but it was there dammit. I'm fighting terrorism by playing violent video games!
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So the Stranger really was Jerry Penacoli! -DKI(ID
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Ahh, economic Darwinism, how I love thee. If I had to choose between the '80s classics "Beat Street" or "Breakin'" for a prestigious award, I'd probably have to go with the latter, since its sequel introduced the mind-shattering concept of marrying *electricity* with the boogaloo.
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I've got a cool pellet gun He's the worst kind of stupid, the accepting kind.
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For the record, I much prefer the grouping of a level artist and a designer in order to make levels for a game instead of just this idea of a 'level designer'. Making the levels in Max from a pre-determined design is a much better route as far as I'm concerned. Making the levels in max allows a lot more visual freedom, and it's easier to someone already familiar with max to do it that way. On the flip side, I find that too many Level Designers (the people who make levels with unrealed) need enough artistic skill that they end up focusing on trying to make the level look good rather than play good. It also tends to result in more of a "I don't know what I'm doing, so I'll just freeform until I get it" kind of approach. If you separate it, what you get are two specialized people doing their jobs quickly and efficiently, instead of one person who has to split his skills. Of course, it requires the industry to accept the idea of a pure designer, and few people are willing to do that. Which is pretty sad. Coincidentally, I also feel that's why so many games end up playing like shit. (Sorry if I'm rehashing points, I wanted to get my views in before the topic went south). -chris
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And when I say using a 3d app sucks as a level editor that's just an opinion of mine, as clearly Eric harbors little or no hatred towards such a workflow. I worked on projects that used a proprietary level editor and projects that used Max. Since I'm an art monkey that already knows Max I tend to side with using Max. I do see the benefits of having using an engine's proprietary level editor of course. But in the end I have no say on the matter since it's the suits that decide which engine we use (the best one I've used is the Unreal Tournament 2003. It was love. |
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See, the problem with ragdolls is that you've thoroughly mangled this dead body, and the knee still doesn't bend backwards, and those arms are all strong as steel. The moneky poured coffee in my MOOTZ!
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I eagerly await a game that lets you throw a body into a combine with an adequate body-separation-and-parts-flying physics model. If I had to choose between the '80s classics "Beat Street" or "Breakin'" for a prestigious award, I'd probably have to go with the latter, since its sequel introduced the mind-shattering concept of marrying *electricity* with the boogaloo.
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You could do that in Nocturne, I'm sure of it. I'm fighting terrorism by playing violent video games!
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Why must you turn this message board into a house of LIES?! If I had to choose between the '80s classics "Beat Street" or "Breakin'" for a prestigious award, I'd probably have to go with the latter, since its sequel introduced the mind-shattering concept of marrying *electricity* with the boogaloo.
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HARDWARE THREAD! So I'm pretty sure my video card is fucked. This morning when I went to turn on my computer, I was greeted by my monitor happily informing me that there was no signal found. Also, the system refused to POST. Noticing a funny sound emanating from the video card fan, I swapped out the Radeon 9500 Pro with my old Radeon 64MB DDR VIVO. Now everything is hunky-dory again. I take it the 9500 is fucked? Got throat problems? Why not try sucking on a Fisherman's Friend!
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Send it to me and I'll check it out. If I had to choose between the '80s classics "Beat Street" or "Breakin'" for a prestigious award, I'd probably have to go with the latter, since its sequel introduced the mind-shattering concept of marrying *electricity* with the boogaloo.
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Sounds fucked. -chris
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#127 Charles Sounds fucked. yeah, I just sent an RMA request to ATI. Got throat problems? Why not try sucking on a Fisherman's Friend!
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ATI is really good about RMA, I even exchanged a stolen MAXX I bought off Polish Mike and they sent me a brand new AIW card that was worth more. Are you here right now or are there probably fossils under your meat
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Polish Mike? Got throat problems? Why not try sucking on a Fisherman's Friend!
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Shoplifter extraordinaire. A very shady character. Are you here right now or are there probably fossils under your meat
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#131 lwf Shoplifter extraordinaire. A very shady character. I see, and you know this man from where? Got throat problems? Why not try sucking on a Fisherman's Friend!
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High school, I think he had some lackey doing most of the actual shoplifting, mainly from the likes of London Drugs and Future Shop. Are you here right now or are there probably fossils under your meat
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#133 lwf High school, I think he had some lackey doing most of the actual shoplifting, mainly from the likes of London Drugs I'd like to smash in his head and Future Shop. nevermind. Got throat problems? Why not try sucking on a Fisherman's Friend!
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Fucking Polish. I don't believe in athiests. -Trolly McTroll
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Is she cute? |
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It's a sort of wax you apply beforehand. Life without shame.
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#122 Jibble I eagerly await a game that lets you throw a body into a combine with an adequate body-separation-and-parts-flying physics model. Games need more human-processing facilities like those in Quake 2. |
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geek wet dream? Got throat problems? Why not try sucking on a Fisherman's Friend!
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No. |
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I wouldn't fuck them with your dick. Are you here right now or are there probably fossils under your meat
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Err... thanks? |
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Because they're filthy sluts. Are you here right now or are there probably fossils under your meat
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The one on the left is pretty cute though. I want a horse that ribbits and a frog that neighs... oink oink oink
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I'm halfway through Thief of Time by Terry Pratchett now, and I must say it's one of the best books I've ever read, if not the best. I go through most English books at about ten pages per night, but I'm cutting through this book like a hot knife through butter. It reads really nice and the funny way Pratchett has of wording things has me giggling all the time. Also, his sense of imagination rocks. I want a horse that ribbits and a frog that neighs... oink oink oink
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I don't think imagination is a sense, smell is though. Are you here right now or are there probably fossils under your meat
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stfu I want a horse that ribbits and a frog that neighs... oink oink oink
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rofl "Someday, someone will best me. But it won't be today, and it won't be you."
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Gunp01nt: I just finished that yesterday. It is pretty damn good. I have to hold up Night Watch as his best so far though. 9 years later you're the fat kid with his face pressed against the window of The Industry. - crash
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#149 Neale Gunp01nt: I just finished that yesterday. It is pretty damn good. I have to hold up Night Watch as his best so far though. Yeah, Night Watch was pretty good. Vimes is a fantastic character, definitely one of Pratchett's best and certainly the most well fleshed out. You just don't Get It
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Yeah, I wanted to get Night Watch but it was already gone at the library. I want to read that one after Thief of Time. I want a horse that ribbits and a frog that neighs... oink oink oink
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Also just finished night watch. It was damn good. My favorite is still Small Gods or Mort though. Death rocks! |
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Someone posted a video of some guy playing guitar really strange and fast-like. I've dug through the archives, but I'll be damned if I can find it. Anyone remember what thread that was in? He leans on the hood telling racing stories, the kids call him Jimmy The Saint.
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