Mittwoch, 28. September 2016
Developer Diary 38
I'm moving back to the early artwork from 2014. The atmosphere is much stronger and there is barely any motion sickness while moving through the woods. Each level consists of a group of domes with holes in the ceiling. Pillar BSP's represent tree trunks and the ceiling holes are sources of static light for better orientation. Enemies are either invisible or hide in the darkness around the player. When he's engulfed by light, he is safe, but when he's moving through the darkness he's vulnerable to attacks.
Progress is very slow these days. I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around the old concept, while approaching it with all this knowledge that I acquired over the last two years. FPS remain high despite hundreds of point lights that are spread out across the domes, representing torches, electric lights or simply daylight - light shafts.
Getting there.
Montag, 12. September 2016
Developer Diary 37 - Architecture and Demotivation
Over the last week, I created seven major architectural segments based on Gothic architecture from 13th century Europe. Each segment took roughly 4 hours to complete. I planned these segments so I would be able to combine them in many different ways, creating enormous structures and palaces with little time input.
I finished the final Gothic cathedral top segment today and converted all other segments into static meshes. With those static meshes I built a large template palace to see how the structure would appear in VR and if I could keep my 75 fps.
While the framerate remained steady at 75 fps, the structures caused so much motion sickness in my head, I could barely keep my dinner down. I don't know what to do anymore. I'm severely demotivated. With all this time spent on another set of structures... and it looks like I can't even use the majority of them, because the gameplay itself will cause people to throw up.
The palace looks incredibly beautiful from the outside. Hell, if this whole thing were a desktop game, it would be the best thing ever. But there's a reason, why I want to build it in VR ... I think it all has to do with the size of the buildings: If each structural element is as tall as a skyscraper, motion sickness doesn't appear to be as bad. But if these structures are close to reality, something goes off in my brain that can't process the images accurately. It's the opposite of what you read online about VR. They all keep blabbering about: "OHHH You gotta keep the structures and door sizes realistic!!!! It's soooo important!!"
And it's pure bullshit. The smaller each hallway and building the worse it gets. And whether you like it or not: A realistic hallway, with realistic measures and realistic doors, is surprisingly narrow. And the FOV does the rest ...
I don't know whether I should be thankful or depressed about the fact that I'm so susceptible to motion sickness. Apparently there's an entire spectrum of people reacting differently to VR and if you want to sell your game, your level needs to be solid and cause no motion sickness whatsoever. But most developers stop noticing motion sickness triggers in their worlds, because they have gotten so used to their HMD. I never got used to mine. It's a nightmare. If I mess up my world, and get sick from it, I can't put on the glasses for several hours or I'll throw up immediately. Some developers keep it together by drinking bottles of whiskey, which is in my opinion the dumbest way ever to deal with this, because you don't fix a shitty level by getting drunk.
Then there are sooo many demos out there right now... they didn't give a shit about the FPS, so they thought: "Hey! Fuck RAM and GPU efficiency, let's downscale the textures!" and it's like you're back in 1996 again.
I can't use too many foliage models or I'll lose my fps.´, which means I HAVE to use fixed structures as converted static meshes. I can't use the structures I created, because they cause motion sickness. I can't scale the structures, because then EVERYTHING is out of proportion. I can't use the monastery models to create the palace, because they were not designed to be used as "palace cells" and can therefore only be connected with each other in a single direction.
This just sucks in so many ways.
I finished the final Gothic cathedral top segment today and converted all other segments into static meshes. With those static meshes I built a large template palace to see how the structure would appear in VR and if I could keep my 75 fps.
While the framerate remained steady at 75 fps, the structures caused so much motion sickness in my head, I could barely keep my dinner down. I don't know what to do anymore. I'm severely demotivated. With all this time spent on another set of structures... and it looks like I can't even use the majority of them, because the gameplay itself will cause people to throw up.
The palace looks incredibly beautiful from the outside. Hell, if this whole thing were a desktop game, it would be the best thing ever. But there's a reason, why I want to build it in VR ... I think it all has to do with the size of the buildings: If each structural element is as tall as a skyscraper, motion sickness doesn't appear to be as bad. But if these structures are close to reality, something goes off in my brain that can't process the images accurately. It's the opposite of what you read online about VR. They all keep blabbering about: "OHHH You gotta keep the structures and door sizes realistic!!!! It's soooo important!!"
And it's pure bullshit. The smaller each hallway and building the worse it gets. And whether you like it or not: A realistic hallway, with realistic measures and realistic doors, is surprisingly narrow. And the FOV does the rest ...
I don't know whether I should be thankful or depressed about the fact that I'm so susceptible to motion sickness. Apparently there's an entire spectrum of people reacting differently to VR and if you want to sell your game, your level needs to be solid and cause no motion sickness whatsoever. But most developers stop noticing motion sickness triggers in their worlds, because they have gotten so used to their HMD. I never got used to mine. It's a nightmare. If I mess up my world, and get sick from it, I can't put on the glasses for several hours or I'll throw up immediately. Some developers keep it together by drinking bottles of whiskey, which is in my opinion the dumbest way ever to deal with this, because you don't fix a shitty level by getting drunk.
Then there are sooo many demos out there right now... they didn't give a shit about the FPS, so they thought: "Hey! Fuck RAM and GPU efficiency, let's downscale the textures!" and it's like you're back in 1996 again.
I can't use too many foliage models or I'll lose my fps.´, which means I HAVE to use fixed structures as converted static meshes. I can't use the structures I created, because they cause motion sickness. I can't scale the structures, because then EVERYTHING is out of proportion. I can't use the monastery models to create the palace, because they were not designed to be used as "palace cells" and can therefore only be connected with each other in a single direction.
This just sucks in so many ways.
Dienstag, 6. September 2016
Developer Diary 36
What if each structure is larger and more complex in size? What if there's an architectural system that can combine single elements into enormous structures, which still look as aesthetic as if they were planned as a single building?
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