Ya
#2997 posted by Qmaster on 2017/10/05 00:34:24
I've done my own dragndrop csqc inventory before. I'd prefer a simpler method, but alas oh well.
Quit Messages
#2998 posted by CoolGuy on 2017/10/05 08:16:40
Hey all, I've never posted on a forum or anything before but I'm seeking some help.
I was just wondering if there was ANY possible way to get back the funny quit messages from vanilla or DarkPlaces in QS. I know enabling "-fitz" in the shortcut gives you the credits box, but its bothering me far more than it should that the original quit messages are seemingly gone in this port.
Any help would me appreciated, thanks
MacOS CLI Install Method
#2999 posted by AAS on 2017/10/14 06:00:10
I've added the 'cask' for the 'homebrew' package manager on macos, now you can install the client from the command line:
1) install homebrew: /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
2) install homebrew-cask: brew tap caskroom/cask
3) install quakespasm: brew cask install quakespasm
4) put pak0.pak and pak1.pak into /Applications/QuakeSpasm/id1
5) enjoy
#3000 posted by iriyap on 2017/10/19 17:18:35
Model skins in some mods are corrupted, appearing half blue, half black. In particular, gib skins in Shrak and tarbabies in Arcanum. This is an old GLQuake bug which is fixed in Bengt Jardrup's Enhanced GLQuake, DarkPlaces, Mark V etc.
#3001 posted by iriyap on 2017/10/19 17:26:53
This bug was present in earlier versions of Mark V, I found it reported here:
http://www.celephais.net/board/view_thread.php?id=60831&start=826&end=850
I suppose, Baker can help you fix it.
I'm Pretty Sure
#3002 posted by Qmaster on 2017/10/20 03:52:01
That the blacknblue checker is indicative of a mod trying to use a skin that doesn't exist. This is most notable with gibs if they are coded to 'inherit' the skin of the monster being gibbed when the gib model only has one skin.
Which mod did you see this on and what model?
#3003 posted by iriyap on 2017/10/20 04:47:23
The corruption doesn't happen with Mark V or Darkplaces running exactly the same installation of Quake. Here's how you can check this:
Grab the mods here:
https://www.quaddicted.com/files/commercial/Shrak2.7z
https://www.quaddicted.com/filebase/arcanum.zip
In Shrak just start the first level and kill one of the shotgun enemies (input "impulse 255" in the console to get Quad Damage so that you can easily gib them), their head gib is affected.
In Arcanum go to map arcanum5. You'll see the tarbabies right at the start.
Not Sure
#3004 posted by Qmaster on 2017/10/20 14:48:51
But maybe the other engines default to skin 0 if the skin is not present?
#3005 posted by ericw on 2017/10/20 21:40:23
for arcanum5, I think you missed an install step; you need to install arcanum on top of drake. The monsters at the start should be spiders, not tarbabies.
In shrak, I see the blue checkerboard on the gibs. It's a feature inherited from fitzquake, I guess the intention was for modders to notice invalid mdl skins.
It looks like MarkV is displaying skin 0 instead of the checkerboard for compatibility with mods like shrak that set invalid skins.
@ericw
#3006 posted by iriyap on 2017/10/20 21:58:27
Oh man, totally missed that part about installing Drake. Guess I got a bit careless when playtesting so many map packs. Still though, the tarbabies don't get the checkerboard pattern in the other engines.
I suppose you could change it to display skin 0 when developer is set to 0, this way it would accommodate both players and modders. Backwards compatibility with old content is pretty important, especially in this decade that's so heavy on the 90's nostalgia.
Just my two cents, is all.
#3007 posted by iriyap on 2017/10/20 22:01:49
Oh, and one more thing. In vanilla GLQuake the gib skins in Shrak are completely white, while they show up just fine in WinQuake (and supposedly DOS Quake as well). It's definitely some old GLQuake quirk.
#3008 posted by metlslime on 2017/10/21 03:40:43
I was the one that at added the blue checkerboard feature. I didn't realize at the time how many mods relied on the behavior of vanilla quake to show skin 0 when the mod asks for an invalid skin. So I now agree, the engine should replicate vanilla quake's permissive behavior and maybe just put up a non-spamy console warning when the bad skin is first set.
#3009 posted by iriyap on 2017/10/21 04:53:24
Glad that I could help. Here's a couple more oddities that I've come across:
- r_wateralpha < 1 results in various see through glitches on non water VISed maps, like e.g. qte1m2 in Travail. Other engines seem to ignore r_wateralpha if the current map is not water VISed, I'd prefer such behavior.
- Console font sometimes has a thin underline/overline with some characters, no matter what value scr_conscale is set to.
- Water textures are not mipmapped and thus look pixelated at distance.
Other Oddities While On The Topic Of Missing Skins
#3010 posted by Qmaster on 2017/10/22 02:22:12
•Missing skin: console warning and checkered texture
•Missing sound: console warning
•Missing model: CRASH to desktop! You lose.
Couldn't this also just be a console warning and remove the entity?
#3011 posted by metlslime on 2017/10/22 07:27:39
well... we could play a checkerboard sound for missing sounds. Like a horn honking or something.
#3012 posted by Joel B on 2017/10/22 08:09:53
play the Wilhelm scream
Q3A Honk
C&C "Your Mission Is A Failure"
#3014 posted by Qmaster on 2017/10/22 15:02:53
Har har
Sliding Effect
#3015 posted by maiden on 2017/10/25 20:08:13
Is there a console command in QuakeSpasm similar to sv_gameplayfix_nogravityonground in Darkplaces? I'm experiencing something called the sliding effect on my setup; it's basically when the player slides forward a small distance before coming to a full stop. AFAIK it is how the Quake engine behaves on modern hardware so the issue persists with all ports faithful to vanilla Quake (FitzQuake, QS etc). My workaround is setting sv_stopspeed to 200 (def 100) but I wonder if that has any effect on player movement (jumping etc). Is there a workaround? Could it be input-related?
#3016 posted by Joel B on 2017/10/25 21:25:19
Isn't that just normal Quake physics momentum at work? Not sure I understand what you're describing.
#3017 posted by anonymous user on 2017/10/25 22:44:29
Not really because it looks like I'm walking on ice or some other low-friction surface rather than the ground. Moreover it reduces the precision of player control when navigating ledges, lifts etc. I don't see this when watching other people's demo runs.
Stopdrift
#3018 posted by Qmaster on 2017/10/25 23:45:51
That is a normal effect in FPSes. Stopping dead from a full out run is jarring and odd. Sv_stopspeed woukd be your best option for this. Try like 1000. This may affect, however, some wind tunnels by preventing them throwing you as far once you touch the ground, but this might be ok.
Stopdrift
#3019 posted by maiden on 2017/10/26 00:58:39
Yes sv_stopspeed is the workaround I'm using. It's not perfect but it gets me there. I tested a value of 9999 to see its effect exaggerated and oddly enough it results in almost 0 forward movement. Similar to setting sv_friction to a high number, except that here it's deceleration and shouldn't affect speed or acceleration, if I have my physics right.
@maiden
The physics in NetQuake and Quakeworld clients is different.
Quakespasm, Fitzquake, Mark V are considered NetQuake. Darkplaces, FTE and others are based on QW. I find QW clients very "swimmy" almost like what are describing. But not so with Quakespasm.
I'm wondering what version of QS are you using (SDL or SDL2) OR if perhaps a setting from another source port has carried over to your current config?
From the readme:
Quakespasm utilizes either the SDL or SDL2 frameworks, so choose
which one works best for you. SDL is probably less buggy, but SDL2
has nicer features and smoother mouse input - though no CD support.
I honestly don't know which one I am using because I switch between source ports quite often.
#3021 posted by ericw on 2017/10/26 01:41:57
I don't know what's going on to be honest..
AFAIK it is how the Quake engine behaves on modern hardware so the issue persists with all ports faithful to vanilla Quake (FitzQuake, QS etc).
The only thing I have heard of that is similar to this is the "multicore timing bug" that affected some Quake clients on Windows (including Fitzquake 0.85 I think?) that had to do with a specific timer API. AFAIK it never affected Quakespasm.
I'd suggest trying MarkV for comparison.
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