evo's words of wisdom

Published June 24, 2005
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Quote: Original post by The Man Firstly, is it a need or a desire?


Good point.

1) Skeletal anim code-- Not a need. Current code works sufficiently well for my purposes. As it currently stands, blended animations are really not part of the design. And models will never be viewed up close or in sufficient detail to make the lack of vertex/bone weighting glaringly obvious.

2) Shadows-- In my opinion, the only real use of a shadow (outside of eyecandy, and I'm not big on eyecandy) is to make it easier to 'place' the object in context; ie, as a point of reference. You see the object's shadow on the ground, you know pretty much where it is standing and whether or not it happens to be floating. In this light, complicated shadows are unnecessary. I will implement 'blurry ovals', and only try trickier stuff if it really looks like ass.

3) Water-- Eesh. Still somewhat undecided, but I'm thinking about a simple texture-animated, translucent plane drawn after everything else. Nothing fancy, just enough to give the illusion of water, and it would be trivial to add to the engine as it stands.

4) Translucent walls-- Still on the fence about this one, but strongly leaning toward no translucency. With large, open levels I believe that the occasional need to rotate the camera to see something should not be too onerous. As the design stands, items and objects dropped are going to be cartoonishly large and obvious (rather than the 'realistic' tiny little thingies as in Diablo and friends) so they will be hard to miss even if occasionally obscured by walls. Especially with the sound bites that will be played when they're dropped.

No pretty images this post either. Building and converting various rock and cactus models for the desert scenery, maybe I'll hook up some screenage later this evening or something.
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Comments

jollyjeffers
Quote: ...complicated shadows are unnecessary. I will implement 'blurry ovals', and only try trickier stuff if it really looks like ass.

I wouldn't overlook shadows too much - they really add a lot of a scene. In the way that HDRI almost automagically improves the colour balance/quality in an image, shadows can automagically improve the depth-perception of an image.

Just out of curiosity, for your target hardware are you at all transform limited? If not, you could probably (at some point in the future) implement a fairly simple stencil shadowing solution.

From the screenies in your journal the camera appears to be "above, looking down" all the time - which can allow you to simplify/cheat for a few basic shadowing algorithms...

Quote: I'm thinking about a simple texture-animated, translucent plane drawn after everything else.

Add some sharp, bright per-vertex specular lighting to that and it'd be sorted. I used this technique some years back, I liked it a lot.

On a general note, a lot of these "you did one, so I must do one" per-pixel refraction/reflection/fresnel-term water effects are starting to look like sheets of (slightly) animated glass. Sure, first time was pretty cool, but the more I see them the less they're looking like **REAL** water [sad]

Quote: No pretty images this post either.

[bawling]

Jack
June 25, 2005 05:51 AM
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