#5945 posted by Trinca on 2009/08/22 16:16:29
jago what for?
pure crap ~:p
please come back to Quake
enought of wasting your time!
Trinca
#5946 posted by Jago on 2009/08/22 16:34:49
Sure, when it does 80k tris at 100+ fps on mediocre hardware and comes with a nice assortment of prebuilt meshes.
Jago
#5947 posted by Zwiffle on 2009/08/22 17:18:53
I have it installed, and I could run it, but I haven't used it in quite a while and am not really inclined to since I have no plans to map for or play UT3. My condolences.
Last Time I Checked
#5948 posted by Text_Fish on 2009/08/22 19:37:51
the world was pretending UT3 doesn't exist.
I Quite Like The Game
#5949 posted by RickyT33 on 2009/08/22 19:49:48
I Don't Get It.
#5950 posted by Text_Fish on 2009/08/22 19:59:40
All the weapons feel flimsy and the visuals have so much 'cyber-punk' grime and lens flare shoved on top that it's nigh impossible to tell what's going on.
#5951 posted by necros on 2009/08/22 20:52:15
maybe screenshots for us who don't have ut3?
Screenshots
#5952 posted by Jago on 2009/08/22 21:37:42
#5953 posted by JneeraZ on 2009/08/22 21:57:22
I like the basic structures and things. Looks like some fun fighting areas there. As you said, very WIP but promising!
#5954 posted by necros on 2009/08/22 21:59:58
i don't think the red brick is that bad, honestly. is there a dirtier version of that texture though? the metal looks pretty grimy but the bricks look pretty new. course, it depends on what look you're going for. full on tech, yeah, you probably want metal walls but if you want industrial, bricks aren't a bad choice.
second and third shots have a nice look to them. i think keeping the amount of symmetry low would be good (but shot 3, for example, should stay symmetrical for contrast)
my only beef is that the map is so full of mesh objects it's hard to see what the underlying brushwork is, but on the other hand, i know that's pretty much how all modern maps are made these days so it's not really a valid complaint. it's just that, for example, shot 1 is basically a square room. the machine mesh objects don't really seem part of the room.
#5955 posted by Trinca on 2009/08/23 01:48:26
look nice and i�m pretty sure will look much better with lights!
now make a Quake remake to :p
Yep
#5956 posted by nitin on 2009/08/23 03:47:35
just need a dirtier brick texture IMHO. DOesnt have to be red but something like a higher res kingping texture.
Kingpin
#5957 posted by necros on 2009/08/23 03:58:44
that's exactly what i was thinking about, now you mention it :)
like it's got 50 years of soot and grime built up.
Nice Shots !
#5958 posted by JPL on 2009/08/23 09:35:52
I love the architecture, particularly the mix in between old school bricks and techno-pillars... I'd really like to see it ingame with the real lighnings now ;)
UT Stuff
#5959 posted by sock on 2009/08/23 17:01:57
@Jago, I like the first screenshot, are those standard mesh objects or something you have created yourself? Sorry not that familiar with UT yet.
@Scampie, Are you going to create any building objects yourself or just terrain and prefabs?
@ Sock
#5960 posted by Jago on 2009/08/23 22:54:56
All the meshes are from stock UT3.
It's actually kind of dictating the way I have to build things. If one is capable of making his own meshes and textures, it's quite easy to just map out the entire raw layout with very few CSG brushes and then just fill out the entire map with custom meshes as you see fit.
However, if you are incapable of making your own meshes and have to rely on the ones available to you, this doesn't quite work. You need to have every room and every corridor filled with at least SOME major mesh detailing pretty much from the start, because they will give you a sense of scale and since you can't make your own, you will at times be building your map around the available meshes instead of building custom meshes to suit your map.
Sock
#5961 posted by - on 2009/08/24 00:09:32
The editor is lacking a ton of support for custom assets, so I am limited to the assets that came with the game, and also limited by the terrain material shaders to an extent (the terrain shaders are combinations of a 'dirt' texture for horizontal areas of terrain and a 'cliff' texture for vertical areas of terrain). It's fine for this, being that I am limited on time as I intend to enter it into a contest, but I hope in the future they'll extend the tools a bit so I can do some custom models or could give a better texture selection for a more unique theme.
http://h.imagehost.org/0313/Detail.jpg
As you can see here, I stick to grass around the grey cliffs, as there is no blend shaders to go from sand to that specific rock (only to rather ugly brownish red desert rock cliffs) but the grass and grey rock have blends.
Also, started to add more little details with decals, which are quite nice since I can modify their opacity and color on a per decal basis. Also help alot in hiding some of the 'pixelation' of textures blending between each other at odd angles
#5962 posted by JneeraZ on 2009/08/24 01:31:18
"The editor is lacking a ton of support for custom assets"
Sorry, but what do you mean here? UT3 doesn't support importing of custom meshes? I'm 99% sure that it does. It won't let you create those meshes inside of UnrealEd but that's not unreasonable.
#5963 posted by JneeraZ on 2009/08/24 01:32:14
Oh, sorry, you're talking about DoW2. Never mind. :P I should have clicked on the screen shot...
Actually :)
#5964 posted by Jago on 2009/08/24 01:40:36
It won't let you create those meshes inside of UnrealEd but that's not unreasonable.
Actually it will and can. You can convert a bunch of brushes into a mesh inside UnrealED. Never had to use that feature but it's there :)
Yeah
#5965 posted by - on 2009/08/24 02:37:07
Willem: worked with UE3 for the past few years, know all about the wonderful pipeline you guys made for it. Sorry for not calling out that I was talking about something radically different than the subject at hand.
DoW2 editor... it's really just a terrain editor, which I'm suprised to find is actually quite limited (no per vertex editing to make cleaning up edges easy? come on), with features to paint materials and place models and decals.
No nice asset pipeline like UE3... haven't really done much real investigation into how they handle any of that, though I likely will after this map is finished, since I suspect I could at least hack around with their files, which shouldn't be too bad for publishing a completed map either, since maps are considered 'mods' and are loaded much like a Quake mod from their own directory (which does limit the ability to play custom maps in the game quite a bit as you have to start the game with "-mod XXX")
Jago
#5966 posted by - on 2009/08/24 02:40:55
There's really not all that much use of making models with brushes in UE3 except for prototyping things (or if you just need a simple model for an interpactor or something)
Jago - Brutal Honesty
#5967 posted by grahf on 2009/08/24 03:41:26
Shots 1 and 2 look pretty nice but the others exemplify what I don't like about UT3 and similar games - architecturally bland, conceptually dull, with some meshes slapped around the edges to hide it. Let's see some actual brushwork, eh? Or something that will actually stress the engine. As it is, you could build it for UT99 and I'd hardly tell the difference.
Of course, that's just my crochety old-schoolness talking.
MisMash Views
#5968 posted by sock on 2009/08/24 13:26:43
@Jago, cool thanks for the info. The brush export thing is something that was added to D3 and was perfect for artist/modellers to get the scale of things right. Sort of standard practice nowadays to export blockout brushwork for artists to create meshes from.
@Scampie, I imagine like most games nowadays, the modding is something of an after thought which is probably why the loading system is so awkward. With decals thou the terrain should really shine and look good. Decals are awesome for covering up crap terrain edges.
@Grahf, I really don't understand the mesh hatred because even good old Q1 had meshes/map models (torches) which I see constantly used in screenshots from others work. Bashing someone because they detail their rooms with meshes is crazy and infact using meshes is more efficient in most engines because of caching/draw reasons. I understand there is a certain pride with creating things from brushes the 'old school' way but the end results are the same, IMHO it seems pointless to argue about the method.
I Think
#5969 posted by megaman on 2009/08/24 13:59:45
he's talking about how the amount of meshes makes everything look too uniform and doesn't allow for interesting room layouts?
e.g. if you'd want to have a torch on every wall in your level, you couldn't do angled stuff (well, i'm oversimplificating here).
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