03-06-2006, 11:14 AM | #2801 | |
The boy who cried Trout
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: TX
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Quote:
I still play this game. :angry: |
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03-06-2006, 12:16 PM | #2802 | |
Hall Of Famer
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Location: New Jersey
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I agree. Welcome to the board, spcd. |
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03-06-2006, 01:02 PM | #2803 | |
Hall Of Famer
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Quote:
While we do disagree on a number of conclusions, I might just nominate this as the definitive comment about MF in the entire thread. If it isn't THE quote, it's pretty darned close IMO.
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03-06-2006, 01:16 PM | #2804 | |
General Manager
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go bruins |
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03-06-2006, 01:17 PM | #2805 | |
College Starter
Join Date: Oct 2000
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Quote:
I'd bet you're off on the buggy part of the equation. There are over three pages of reported problems with the game already, and I would think that sales of the game are quite low at this point. I bet the reason we're not seeing hordes of bug reports is simply due to the fact that not many people have the game, and many of them appear to be stuck getting the game to work properly in the first place. But I do agree completely that the design decisions involved with the game are boggling as they unfold. The design decision to create a game where frame-rate impacts play results is simply baffling. The implications of this are too much to bear. There is discussion that 30-32 frames per second (fps) is ideal, and that things work fairly well at 20+fps. Below 20fps and the results are unstable. But even if there is, say, a 10% difference in pass completion rates between a 32fps computer and a 24fps computer, that completely screws up the reliability of playbooks to produce realistic game results. The offshoot of this is that the play that I create that works well on my computer at 32fps might work differently on your computer running at 23fps? If this is true, I simply don't see how you can possibly create playbooks for multiple users with any certainty. Do you label your playbooks with a frame-rate precursor: West Coast Offense (25-28fps ok)? Then you buy a new video card and redo everything? Maybe I'm wrong and the differences in results aren't that great, but even a 5% difference in results in a game like this is significant. /shakes head in wonder Last edited by Godzilla Blitz : 03-06-2006 at 01:20 PM. |
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03-06-2006, 01:21 PM | #2806 | |
Head Coach
Join Date: Dec 2001
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Quote:
lol
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03-06-2006, 01:22 PM | #2807 | |
lolzcat
Join Date: May 2001
Location: williamsburg, va
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I wondered about the frame rate thing...
What I couldn't figure out is if it caused a problem when the human is controlling the qb (reasonable) or the AI is controlling the qb (out and out strange by my understanding of things).
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03-06-2006, 01:26 PM | #2808 | |
Head Coach
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Quote:
I'll agree with Jon here. Even if this game worked perfectly as designed, I still would not want to play it. Part of that is just different strokes for different folks. I've never been able to get into FM, which most consider to be the best text sim in the world. That's because a futbol game will never appeal to me. But some of these decisions, like the framerate decision, the database choice, the physics driven stats, seem like things to which any reasonable gamer would object. Certainly, I have to suspect that, had Mr. Winters been more involved in seeking out and presenting his design ideas to an educated and critical audience--before he had reduced them to code, he may have made some choices differently. And that's a shame because it's a lost opportunity--kind of like being Irish and NOT naming your kid "Miles O'Smiles." |
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03-06-2006, 01:29 PM | #2809 |
Coordinator
Join Date: Jan 2003
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If anyone who knows anything about game design can comment on why the frame rate might impact the gameplay, please do so. I find it very strange and haven't heard of any other games where FR would have the kind of impact that is suggested here.
It makes no sense to me. Is there a reason why it would need to be coded this way? Last edited by KWhit : 03-06-2006 at 01:29 PM. |
03-06-2006, 01:36 PM | #2810 | |
College Starter
Join Date: Oct 2000
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Quote:
I think it's not necessarily a direct "frame-rate impacts gameplay", but more that the physics engine determines the play results, but the intermediary step is that somehow the physics engine determines what happens on screen, and what happens on screen determines the play results. In all fairness, to say "There was a design decision to have frame-rates impact gameplay." is not accurate, but the end result of other design decisions results in the frame-rate affecting gameplay. I might have this explanation all wrong though, and perhaps someone with more knowledge will step in a clear it up. It does seem clear that frame-rates impact play results in the game, though. The extent of the impact is unknown. Last edited by Godzilla Blitz : 03-06-2006 at 01:39 PM. |
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03-06-2006, 01:37 PM | #2811 | |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: At the corner of Beat Street and Electric Avenue
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Quote:
That is another thing that pisses me off. It shouldn't affect the physics of the game either way. A slower frame rate should just make it more choppier, but not affect if the ball goes farther or if a player fields the ball. In other words, the physic of the game shoud not be affected at all.
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03-06-2006, 01:40 PM | #2812 | ||
lolzcat
Join Date: May 2001
Location: williamsburg, va
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Quote:
Right, but if a human is controlling the QB it could be a matter of bad timing, etc. because of the frame rate.. not that the physics are off, but because what you are seeing is not jiving with what you are hitting on your controller.
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03-06-2006, 01:41 PM | #2813 |
Pro Starter
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Location: Fairfax, VA
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Just saw a thread where no one has seen a fumble yet. Do they have fumbles in Canada?
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03-06-2006, 01:42 PM | #2814 | |
College Starter
Join Date: Oct 2000
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Quote:
Ah...I see. This may make more sense. I may need to stand corrected on this, then. Last edited by Godzilla Blitz : 03-06-2006 at 01:44 PM. |
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03-06-2006, 01:42 PM | #2815 | |
Head Coach
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Quote:
I think they are called "whoopsies".
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03-06-2006, 01:44 PM | #2816 | |
General Manager
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Quote:
I guess fumbles break the AI. |
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03-06-2006, 01:44 PM | #2817 | |
Pro Starter
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Quote:
That's a very simplified explanation. But framerate should not affect gameplay at all. It should affect visual quality, and its impact in a shooter can be noticable simply because a low framerate is annoying and difficult to control, but the results should not vary that much.
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03-06-2006, 01:44 PM | #2818 | |
Coordinator
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Quote:
I always assumed that in most (all?) games the game engine was what determine what happened in-game and the screen was just a delivery tool used to display that to the gamer. So in effect, what happens in-game happens no matter what the FR is, but your FR just determines how much of it you get to see. (Basically just as you describe in the post I quoted). Am I wrong in my general thoughts on how game code works in general? |
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03-06-2006, 01:48 PM | #2819 | |
Death Herald
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Le stelle la notte sono grandi e luminose nel cuore profondo del Texas
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Quote:
There is a workaround. Anytime you think there is a fumble, simply keep taking a knee until the other team gets the ball.
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03-06-2006, 01:48 PM | #2820 | |
General Manager
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Location: The Satellite of Love
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Quote:
For one, frame rate would effect the game in that it slows down the game's response to input. The slower the frame rate, the slower the game receives input from the user and that in turn creates a slower handling of the input and on screen respresentation of the input's effect. For instance, let's say I get 30 FPS on my game. That means 30 times per second, the game is taking reading my input, handling it and displaying the effect. If you get 20 FPS, that means it happens 20 times per second. (Now that the obvious is out of the way...) Let's say a tenth into a second, something happens. I see it and respond accordingly, as you do as well. However, with your slower frame rate, you see the situation slightly later than I do, respond later, and the game reads you input in responcse to this later than it does for me. This split second difference could cause you to miss a receiver where as I wouldn't several times over a game since I saw an opening just before you would, giving me an advantage. Also, it means sometimes I will see something that you wouldn't. Since I'm getting 10 frames more per second than you, I get that much more information than you. As for this game specifically, people seem to be making reference to the frame rate effecting physics. As someone who has read a lot on graphics and game engine design and programming, I can honestly say that makes absolutely no sense to me. Physics and graphics are supposed to be completely seperate parts of the overall game engine. The only thing a graphics engine is supposed to do is desplay graphics. That's it. It shouldn't have anything to do with the physics. |
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03-06-2006, 01:49 PM | #2821 | ||
lolzcat
Join Date: May 2001
Location: williamsburg, va
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Quote:
Depends on if that is the issue. I don't know what the scenario is, I can't tell from the posts. If they are in "coach only" mode (which it seems many are) then I'm with you, it makes no sense. But if they are controlling the players, it's not that far-fetched imo based on some experience with things like FPS's when they have low frame rate and you just can't "do what you want to do"...
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03-06-2006, 01:52 PM | #2822 |
College Starter
Join Date: Oct 2000
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Found it. The following exchange is in a thread talking about play results using coach mode, which I'm guessing means that the player isn't controlling the quarterback.
Here's the comment by a gamer named Magnum: Ok, I did what you suggested and just to let you know that my system is suppose to be under the system spec requirements, but I have been able to play the game overall. I'm only getting about a 15 Frame Per Second count which I do know is a bit slow. I find it a bit odd that the Frame Per Second would cause the problem of how the Physics work in the game. I thought the Physics of the game is handled with Math in the engine of the game? And here is Eriks' response: It's a combination of the two, this is why the game caps FPS at 32 and we've found that the 25-32 range is ideal though based on some testing 20-32 is the extended "everything's ok range". The minimum specs on the game were set to guarantee thatit would run in that 20-32 fps range. If you are getting 15 fps and are below the minimum listed spec, that may well be the problem. |
03-06-2006, 01:52 PM | #2823 | |
Coordinator
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Conyers GA
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Quote:
Interesting. I'm not sure I follow exactly what you mean by fixed-timestep sim/physics engine versus a variable-rate one. But it sounded like you were saying that if a programmer uses the variable-rate engine the code must be written in a way that takes framrate into account and manipulates the resulting in-game event enough so that gameplay between 15 fps and 40 fps (for example) has the same gameplay experience. Obviously one will look much choppier, but the actual gameplay wouldn't be affected. Is that what you are saying? |
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03-06-2006, 01:53 PM | #2824 | |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: At the corner of Beat Street and Electric Avenue
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Quote:
I will have to go look into those posts, but I remember that it was an issue for both coach mode and arcade.
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03-06-2006, 01:54 PM | #2825 | |||||||||||||||
lolzcat
Join Date: May 2001
Location: williamsburg, va
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Since I've been a bit of a nayser...
Looks like, if nothing else, they are working on patching. We can question their prioritizing, speed, etc.. .but it looks like they are working on it...
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03-06-2006, 01:56 PM | #2826 | ||
Coordinator
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Conyers GA
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Quote:
Quote:
Last edited by KWhit : 03-06-2006 at 01:57 PM. |
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03-06-2006, 02:00 PM | #2827 |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Fairfax, VA
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Wow, it just gets better and better...things like punts going out of bounds and brought out to the 20 instead of spotting where it went out of bounds...Sometimes there's not a second half kickoff, you just start where the ball was spotted last. How desperate do you have to be for a graphical football game for this to be acceptable to you?
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03-06-2006, 02:08 PM | #2828 | |
n00b
Join Date: Mar 2006
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It seems to me, that the game has novelly re-introduced 1997-era multiplay game lag....into a single player game. A fairly remarkable achievement, almost like accidently discovering an alchemist stone for turning gold into lead.
As the problem was reported by someone trying out the PDS, I'm assuming this has nothing to do with controlling players, especially as Winter said he designed the secondary sim engine because the primary couldn't handle being sped up. As it appears both the PDS, and Game have memory leaks, then it almost guarantees that game results will vary for a user within a particular game. I'm surprised they managed to get this out the door with any results at all, given that balancing must be almost impossible due to performance variance. Perhaps that's another clue why all the teams need superstars to play: they just couldn't balance it all. Quote:
I'm beginning to see why even small build changes resulted in so much testing the last few weeks, with the number of variables, and a variable result-engine, they've probably been wasting man-weeks trying to figure out what's wrong. ---- JonInMiddleGA Just to add, this is the type of game which would be too expensive in wasted time if they gave it away for free. It's a damn shame, as some of the concepts could have resulted in the successor to Front Page. |
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03-06-2006, 02:10 PM | #2829 |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: At the corner of Beat Street and Electric Avenue
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Oh geez....
Even David talks about frame rate affecting the physics of the game. http://www.matrixgames.com/forums/fb.asp?m=868601 "The only reason I've not released a video is that no video software I've tried (from FRAPS all the way up to the $1000 video editing tools) captures the game at a quality video rate. The game runs at about 60FPS (completely system dependent obviously) but as soon as I run FRAPS or some other video capture software the frame rate drops to about 10 or 12. This really impacts the quality of the animation (it' becomes very choppy). If the frame rate drops too low (under 10) even the physics engine is effected. So rather than release a video of a game running at a poor video rate, I've not released any at all. As was mentioned, many people saw it at a pro football game last year (long before some of the new features were added) and nobody had any complaints with the animations (at least no one mentioned them to me anyway)."
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03-06-2006, 02:13 PM | #2830 |
Pro Starter
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dola....
And that was just talking about showing a video clip of the game.
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03-06-2006, 02:14 PM | #2831 |
General Manager
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: The Satellite of Love
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Another gem from Daivd...
"Actually I'm using exactly the same technology other developers are using. DirectX is DirectX is DirectX..." See, he's using DirectX. That means it's Microsoft's fault and not his engine design. |
03-06-2006, 02:15 PM | #2832 |
General Manager
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: New Mexico
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This game would have to come with a free computer for me to consider it.
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03-06-2006, 02:20 PM | #2833 | |
Head Coach
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: North Carolina
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Quote:
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03-06-2006, 02:20 PM | #2834 | |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: At the corner of Beat Street and Electric Avenue
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Quote:
It depends on the computer for me.
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03-06-2006, 02:23 PM | #2835 |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Dec 2003
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This thread used to be so fun, but it has evolved once again into a serious discussion about game design, business practices and questionable code. What is the next thing that this thread will morph into?
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03-06-2006, 02:27 PM | #2836 | |
College Starter
Join Date: Oct 2000
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Quote:
The 1280-players-per-position player database at league creation and the 40-60 rounds per annual rookie draft default settings really jumped out at me in flashing red letters. I mean, those aren't things you do by accident. It would appear now that they are designed to completely mask a dysfunctional player rating system. The proof will be when reports come in as gamers try to play games with non-superstar teams, or as they try to modify the player-generation parameters to create leagues with more balanced player ratings (in effect, as gamers try to "customize the game"). As it stands, it doesn't seem like this is easy accomplished in the game's current state. Randomly created players have the same ratings (in the 30's) and you must manually edit each one to change the ratings. There are league creation figures that can globally modify the number of rounds and players ratings, but the only person who seems to have tried that couldn't get it to work correctly. Last edited by Godzilla Blitz : 03-06-2006 at 02:35 PM. |
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03-06-2006, 02:27 PM | #2837 | |
General Manager
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Location: The Satellite of Love
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Quote:
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03-06-2006, 02:32 PM | #2838 | |
Head Coach
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: North Carolina
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Quote:
But, see. That's what makes this thread fun. The fact that the vast majority of us are actually rooting for the guy and want him to make a good game. This would have just been some sophmoric episode on the internet if we were simply engaged in schadenfreude or even actively trying to hurt the game's chances of succeeding. Anyone can be a nay-sayer or a critic. We, however, actually LOVE games like this, and we can't help ourselves from seeing what neat things exist in at least the idea of the game. And we can't help ourselves from going into constructive criticism mode. That's just who we are. We want this game to work and we want to do what we can to help make it work. That's what makes this thread great. Anyone can make jokes. True comedy comes from the seriousness underlying the jokes. Unfortunately, I get the sense that we came off to Davied as simple nay-sayers and hucksters. And he didn't think to ask what we were really laughing at until it was too late. |
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03-06-2006, 02:47 PM | #2839 | ||
n00b
Join Date: Mar 2006
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Quote:
Tester 1 "my quarterback never hits the WR" Tester 2 "my quarterback never throws an incompletion" Winter "let's change the ratings" Tester 1/Tester 2 "it works now" when the symptom could have simply been variable frame rate and the "resolution" being confirmed solely by the chance confluence of both testers machines during a particular series of tests. They do seem aware of the problem, the 22-30 FPS being reported "ok," but I really don't see how anyone could have that level of confidence, especially in a genre where the smallest offsets and balancing issues are usually what makes or breaks a game. Quote:
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03-06-2006, 02:51 PM | #2840 | |
Stadium Announcer
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Burke, VA
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I like this quote from Daivd:
Quote:
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03-06-2006, 02:53 PM | #2841 |
Hall Of Famer
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Location: Newburgh, NY
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Pretty much doing everything they expected
is very different from Pretty much doing everything they wanted
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03-06-2006, 03:07 PM | #2842 |
College Starter
Join Date: Oct 2000
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I've probably spent 10 hours or more following this release over the past week, and most of it has been with the same kind of curiosity that I have as I look at a bad car accident. At one point, I suppose I had hope that everyone in the accident would turn out well, but that hope faded a few hours after release. Even when I knew that things weren't going to turn out well in my eyes, I kept watching though. Car accidents are so amazing.
At some point today, though, my fascination has morphed into the feeling that well, perhaps there is something wrong for me stopping and watching a car accident for so long and with such fascination. I feel like I'm just kicking the victims at this point, when in reality I wish them good luck in getting things on track. I doubt I have the self-discipline not to read this thread, so I'm sure I'll read everything anyone writes, but work has piled up and there is life to be lived. It's strange, though. In some bizarre manner, this thread has inspired me. I started to learn to program about a year and half ago, and started to try my hand at creating a simple text-sim. After a while I sort of stopped working on it, and the plan fizzled into nothing productive. I have no idea how this has happened, but for some strange reason, after following this release I have a stronge urge to get back to work on that. Go figure. Last edited by Godzilla Blitz : 03-06-2006 at 03:10 PM. |
03-06-2006, 03:25 PM | #2843 | |
Hattrick Moderator
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Quote:
never heard of them personally. But we did have some funballs, or at least that's how a guy on my senior football team called them FM
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03-06-2006, 03:31 PM | #2844 | |
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Quote:
In a fixed-timestep sim engine, every update on the sim loop assumes the exact same amount of time has passed (say, 1/30th of a second). So, if you are running at 60FPS, you only update the sim every other frame. Then the graphics code takes positions and velocities from the sim and figures out where everyone is on the screen this particular frame. It sounds like things would be choppy, but the reality is the AIs aren't going to completely change what they are doing all that often, so it works fine. If your update rate is slow enough, you can get things going through walls, etc, but at 1/30th of a second update time you're not likely to notice. In a variable timestep engine, you figure out how much time has passed since the last update and use that. So, at 60FPS, your frame time is 1/60th of a second. But on another machine someone might be running at 72FPS, so the sim has frame times of 1/72nd of a second. The sim updates itself accordingly. Where these differ is in the results of the physics. Say you are throwing a ball in a 3D world. Curves are too expensive to compute (or more importantly do collision detection on), so you use line segments to simulate. You figure out how far it would move this frame, add in gravity, and see where it ends up. If your frame times differ, you'll end up with slightly different paths for the grenade. You're doing a piecewise approximation of the path, where your pieces will have varying lengths, so the path is slightly off. In an FPS, this could mean the grenade hits on one box where it would just barely clear the wall on another, but not enough for anyone to truly notice. But where it HAS been noticed in the past is in something like say jump distance. You get your framerate down low enough in some early shooters and you could jump farther, clear taller obstacles, etc. So you need to do something to deal with the issue. One way is to break up long pieces into multiple smaller ones. So, if your frame rate is only 10 FPS, you might update your sim twice for an effective 20FPS. Or just break up the small tasks where needed: if your movement piece is longer than 1 meter, simulate it in 2 0.5 meter chunks. Another is to put a min cap: if your frame rate dips too low, you can slow time down a bit. If someone is running at 8 FPS, they aren't going to notice that time is moving slower than normal thanks to the low frame rate. You usually have to do something in either case, as you need to deal with high velocities. This is called the "bullet through paper" problem: the bullet moves so far in one frame that you never see a collision with the thin obstacle in the middle of its path. So you need to do some sort of intermediate collision steps or breakdown of the path. You end up with a hybrid of the two: most variable-rate engines will have some sort of fixed-step algorithms in them to deal with high velocities. And even a fixed-step engine needs to deal with this for high-velocity objects. As with anything in game design, there are tradeoffs and issues to deal with either way. Variable-rate engines mean the rendering engine doesn't need to have interpolation as the sim is up-to-date, while fixed-rate engines tend to have more stable math. But you have to pay attention to both to make sure the physics work.
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03-06-2006, 03:41 PM | #2845 | |
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Quote:
Masochism?
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03-06-2006, 04:36 PM | #2846 | |
Coordinator
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gstelmack:
Thanks for taking the time to reply. That makes a lot of sense and is pretty fascinating to me. I've never really understood how game engines work and this is shedding some light on that. So to follow up, it seems that this is a key statement you made that may explain what it looks like is happening in MF: Quote:
Because of the nature of the Play Development System in MF and the desire to share playbooks online, this seems like it could cause pretty significant problems. I saw that one thing Daivd has done to try to alleviate this is to put a FR cap on the game at 32 fps. I would imagine that there are other things that could be done to the code to tighten things up further. I would imagine that results could be quite different between gamers that can run the game at 32fps and those that can run it at 20fps. Do developers typically try to account for this type of discrepancy as well? Is that something that should be expected of a developer who uses a variable time-step engine? I'm not trying to be nit-picky here and bash MF. I ask because I have never heard of a situation where frame rate affects the actual gameplay, so there must be something that developers do to account for varying framerates, right? |
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03-06-2006, 04:41 PM | #2847 | |
Pro Starter
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Quote:
In other words, there are ways to mitigate the effects. The reality is every engine has a bit of both, with variable-rate engines doing some fixed-rate bits to reduce these issues, and a fixed-rate engine moving some variable rate code (interpolation) into the rendering bits.
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03-06-2006, 04:58 PM | #2848 | |
Coordinator
Join Date: Jan 2003
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Quote:
Okay. I think most of us raised our eyebrows when Matrix/Daivd mentioned that the physics were affected by the frame rate. It sounds like that is explainable from a programming point of view, but it is something that should have been accounted for in the game code (in other words: a bug). |
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03-07-2006, 07:36 AM | #2849 |
Morgado's Favorite Forum Fascist
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Greensboro, NC
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FPS talk finally kills this thread?
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The media don't understand the kinds of problems and pressures 54 million come wit'! |
03-07-2006, 07:50 AM | #2850 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2003
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Quote:
No the thread is waiting for its next mutation.
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