MarkV Tries To Have Dynamic Maximum Edict Allocation
(And fails)
#31043 posted by
mankrip on 2019/05/24 15:21:42
The artistic skills employed in the Q2 models are much superior
I'm talking about the art, not the file format.
In Q1 there's the squished dead fish head, the badly offset knight skin, the badly bent knight sword in one frame of its animations, the lack of a vore idle pose, stuff like that.
It's not about technical limitations. It's more likely about lack of time to correct mistakes before they released the game.
For example, Hexen II models were created with vastly superior skills, despite using the same format.
#31044 posted by
Kinn on 2019/05/24 15:34:07
The Hexen 2 models are better yes, but still have crap stuff - there's some cat-headed man thing whose legs collapse like squished cardboard boxes during his run animation for example.
#31045 posted by
Kinn on 2019/05/24 15:38:52
in general, if you want to study great low-poly models, looking at stuff from the 90s might not be the best strategy.
In modern times, ultra-low polycounts are still used for some mobile games, and can be found in some indie games and whatnot for stylistic reasons, if you dig around you can find some incredible artistry on display in this area.
#31046 posted by
mankrip on 2019/05/24 19:30:34
Rareware N64 games also had great animations with incredibly low polycounts. Banjo & Kazooie, Conker's Bad Fur Day, and so on.
Turok 2 also has great animations, despite the wonky physics.
Unreal may have had skeletal animations, but they were too floaty and IMO inferior to Q1 model animations. Unreal II and UT fixed that.
Q1 Models
#31047 posted by
madfox on 2019/05/24 23:11:40
While talking of Q1 models. I've got this strange habbit noone could explain yet.
As a fan of Q1 models I was searching for long for the SailorMoon models of Usaki. I finally found them and tried to convert them from Q2 to Q1. This worked but the texture file got lost. Normally I split up a base model, import it again as dxf and start texturing again.
A lot of work, but I don't mind.
Then I thought of Noesis, that would help me out. No, not the slightest idea how to add the skin file.
Then I found Qwalk, and yes, there were my models, without weapon but allright, that can be fixed with merging.
But my question, these models grew up to something of 3Mb, quite large. I experienced when loading them up in Quark4.07 and saving them would deminish them back to 750kb.
Only warning is "Some vertices have the same front and back side, you will get strange effects" but in game there is no sign of them.
What's the reason of this warning and would it be destructive.
MadFox
#31048 posted by
mankrip on 2019/05/25 01:20:29
QuArK sucks for modeling. It splits the vertices shared between the front and the back sides of the texture, making the model filesize larger and killing the gouraud shading across front/back seams.
The 3MB thing, however, seems to be an issue with triangles having both a backside and a frontside.
(triangle backside&frontside isn't the same thing as texture backside&frontside)
Right
#31049 posted by
madfox on 2019/05/25 01:45:51
thanks for your answer mankrip.
I'm allready glad I catched the models with Qwalk. Sad I don't understand the manual of Noesis. It seems there are not many Q1 model converters.
Yes, QaArK ain't the best model studio.
Got to row with the peddles there are at hand.
Hehehehe...
#31050 posted by
Izhido on 2019/05/25 02:25:02
With Oculus Quest out in the field, I’m wondering, given the team behind the hardware and SDK, what would happen if somebody like me or you guys attempted to publish one of our engines to the Oculus Store 😂
How About This
#31057 posted by друг on 2019/05/25 16:38:45
Create a thread of your own where you can rant about otr and post drunken burps one title at a time while the other threads on this board remain clean and on-topic!
Quake Models Are Shit !
#31061 posted by anonymous user on 2019/05/25 22:23:38
Who Is That Anonymous Shitmodel?
#31065 posted by
madfox on 2019/05/25 23:13:33
Sorry, wrong beef thread.