Yes, exactly. It wasn't good nor fun but it felt like playing "the future"... And that was good enough for me!
Riiiight.
It's okay, GAF won't judge!
There's no need to make up excuses. If you're into Sonic role playing we won't judge.
This game is bugged on PC too. I refuse to consider this game a technical achievement where npc use to appear from the nothing.This thread is about technology ... not the bugs of the game. And Unity looks amazing on the right PC. Forget consoles for Unity. Not worth to mention.
Oh God. XD
(Please don't let the mods see this and give me a tag).
This game is bugged on PC too.
Half the people discussing specific years and the other half are complaining that getting a good performance out of a limiting platform should account for me. Jeez christ does this shit get annoying, especially when the thread title is clear as day. Might as well split the thread up at this point.
I thought you just watched your friend play for two hours after seeing the game for the first time in person recently. The way ACU is built means that it's never "doing next to nothing." The player can be doing next to nothing but there's always things happening in the background, like the AI simulation, the cloth simulation, cloud simulation etc. Also don't know what you're talking about because the game seems to run perfectly fine when the player is doing next to nothing, and next to perfectly fine when the player is doing things. Also on it being next gen:Just the way the world is built is more than anything that could be handled on 360 and ps3. Because it's not just about scaling the graphics down, they would have to rebuild the entire world just for it to run on last gen like they had to do with WD, which definitely looked to be made on a bigger scale than last gen titles, (damn it crossgen). I mean Notre Dame took a year to build, and i'm just talking about the world itself, that's not including the AI, which all are doing their own little routine, even though it may not sound like much, one of the hardest things for them to accomplish was getting npcs to hold hands and be able to react if they get separated, not to mention that if you add cloth physics to every single one of those AI, and not just flappy cloth simulation like what you get when Trevor rides a motorcycle, actual deformation of the cloth. They'd have to do a shit ton of downscaling to get it to run on previous gen, I'd argue that it'd barely be the same game anymore outside of certain concepts like the open mission structure. Take Killzone SF for example, I believe that like CODAW could definitely run on ps3 if they scaled the graphics down, it's a linear shooter after all. It's certainly not as buggy as Skyrim was, I mean come on, Skyrim was ridiculous due to the sheer size.Agreed, but ACU takes it to the next level. It's by far the buggiest and worst running open-world game I've ever played. Even more so than Skyrim on the 360. For example - GTA V on PS4 pretty much only dips when traveling through the city at high speeds. ACU dips frames when doing next to nothing. It's not just the odd dip here and there, it's constant enough to impact the game's enjoyment. I mean...which other open-world game in recent years, besides Skyrim, has been under so much scrutiny for running so poorly? All of those bells and whistles are awesome...if the game actually runs well enough for you to appreciate them.
And I disagree about the game being "very clearly" next-gen. I simply didn't get that 'wow factor' feeling from playing it like I've gotten with other titles such as Driveclub, Killzone, and Ryse. It didn't make me think "now this is next-gen". Maybe it would if I saw it on PC, but it didn't on PS4.
What superb graphic technology use exactly except the npc number compromised to multiple layers of popin?What does that have to do with what graphical technologies the game is using?
Kind of confused about people shitting themselves over missing console games. It shouldn't be surprising the the most technically advanced games through history are largely found on arcades and PCs.
Driveclub deserves it but I know it's on console and blablabla 30 fps sucks no 16 AF budget hardware when there are others aspect really remarkable which people not give a fuck.
This is a joke right? Where are the hidden cameras...
2002 is Star Fox Adventures. It looks amazing even today.
This is a joke right? Where are the hidden cameras...
-Great example of how to do Physically based shading and rendering, every material looks accurate, from metal to leather to silk.What superb graphic technology used exactly except the npc number which suffer of terrible popin?
2002 is Star Fox Adventures. It looks amazing even today, especially the fur effects, which were revolutionary for the time.
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Were you around at the time?
I also remember playing an hologram based arcade adventure game in the late 80's / early 90's... Can't remember the name though.
I was definitely more impressed by KI's tech. Animations were way better than most 2D games, sprites were huge and very detailed, the moving pre-rendered background were amazing looking, the definition certainly was higher than most games at that time as well.
Also, tech wise, Fear Effect was stunning for a PSone title.
I agree with your reasoning for Halo, but the framerate towards the end really kills it. I believe a good framerate should also be a part of any technical achievement.What is RotCW doing for 2001? Great game, but I don't recall anything particularly special about those graphics. They were extremely... adequate?
I mean, even if we're just talking FPS to keep the discussion vaguely like-for-like, what puts RotCW over something like Halo? Halo was using vastly more advanced shading (normal-mapped specular reflections from dynamic lights on environment surfaces, including spotlights, for instance). Halo received much more reknown for high quality across large environments (compare the second level of Halo 1 to that sniping stuff on mission 3 of RotCW, for instance). Halo's AI (and their use in large complex encounters)have a good reputation to this day.
I thought you just watched your friend play for two hours after seeing the game for the first time in person recently. The way ACU is built means that it's never "doing next to nothing." The player can be doing next to nothing but there's always things happening in the background, like the AI simulation, the cloth simulation, cloud simulation etc. Also don't know what you're talking about because the game seems to run perfectly fine when the player is doing next to nothing, and next to perfectly fine when the player is doing things. Also on it being next gen:Just the way the world is built is more than anything that could be handled on 360 and ps3. Because it's not just about scaling the graphics down, they would have to rebuild the entire world just for it to run on last gen like they had to do with WD, which definitely looked to be made on a bigger scale than last gen titles, (damn it crossgen). I mean Notre Dame took a year to build, and i'm just talking about the world itself, that's not including the AI, which all are doing their own little routine, even though it may not sound like much, one of the hardest things for them to accomplish was getting npcs to hold hands and be able to react if they get separated, not to mention that if you add cloth physics to every single one of those AI, and not just flappy cloth simulation like what you get when Trevor rides a motorcycle, actual deformation of the cloth. They'd have to do a shit ton of downscaling to get it to run on previous gen, I'd argue that it'd barely be the same game anymore outside of certain concepts like the open mission structure. Take Killzone SF for example, I believe that like CODAW could definitely run on ps3 if they scaled the graphics down, it's a linear shooter after all.
This doesn't hold a candle to Killzone 2 from much earlier.
Holosseum or Time Traveller.
2002 is Star Fox Adventures. It looks amazing even today, especially the fur effects, which were revolutionary for the time.
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Were you around at the time?
It's odd that you're taking such an aggressive stance against the game, to be honest. I don't think it was the most impressive for 2002 but it was still up there. Rare put the TEV to great use with grass (more impressive than fur by far as you could have entire fields of the stuff) and fur, excellent lighting and shadows from environmental light sources (including shadows cast on player characters from scene geometry in many areas), solid texturing, good post processing (depth of field work), and a nearly rock solid 60 fps. Some of the things in SFA weren't really even yet common on the PC (post processing stuff like DOF was definitely not something 2002 PC games were doing with ease, for instance).Around the time what? When that was a 64DD game called Dinosaur Planet? Yes junior I was around.
It was definitely amazing at the time especially since it ran well on a 486. Nowhere near as impressive as Sega's arcade work, of course, but still cool.one of the games i remember being SUPER impressive when i was a kid in the early 90s was Terminal Velocity. holy fuck did it blow my mind.. it looked amazing and the 360 degree freedom of movement was a trip back then for me.
Halo was definitely impressive with its shader use and far beyond RtCW. The frame-rate was it's only real issue, unfortunately. That kind of shader work was rather uncommon in games from that era.I mean, even if we're just talking FPS to keep the discussion vaguely like-for-like, what puts RotCW over something like Halo? Halo was using vastly more advanced shading (normal-mapped specular reflections from dynamic lights on environment surfaces, including spotlights, for instance). Halo received much more reknown for high quality across large environments (compare the second level of Halo 1 to that sniping stuff on mission 3 of RotCW, for instance). Halo's AI (and their use in large complex encounters)have a good reputation to this day.
I was clearly referring to the player doing nothing, just like I was talking about the players actions when talking about GTA V's framerate drops. Don't be a smart ass. And in regards to the framerate being "next to perfectly fine when the player is doing things", that is just plain false. The game dips when walking through a crowd. That's laughable. I don't care if there are tons of NPCs on-screen if the game is running at 24fps. I'd gladly take a hit in the number of on-screen NPCs if if means the game will run better. Running through it makes it dip even further. You can't refute this. Digital Foundry videos are up for everyone to see, including a post-patch comparison
That quote above reveals everything I need to know about you when it comes to this game. You will flat out lie and make excuses for it's shortcomings no matter what. So what if NPCs have realistic cloth physics if they pop in and change colour mere feet away from the player? All I hear from you are excuses for why certain things are shitty. It's pointless arguing about it with you. Your love of the franchise has clearly resulted in you viewing the game through rose-tinted glasses.
2009 should be Uncharted 2.
Don't waste your time. I tried to point out the still broken gameplay mechanics in another thread and was basically told I am just playing the game wrong.
It was definitely amazing at the time especially since it ran well on a 486. Nowhere near as impressive as Sega's arcade work, of course, but still cool.
Don't waste your time. I tried to point out the still broken gameplay mechanics in another thread and was basically told I am just playing the game wrong.
I was clearly referring to the player doing nothing, just like I was talking about the players actions when talking about GTA V's framerate drops. Don't be a smart ass. And in regards to the framerate being "next to perfectly fine when the player is doing things", that is just plain false. The game dips when walking through a crowd. That's laughable. I don't care if there are tons of NPCs on-screen if the game is running at 24fps. I'd gladly take a hit in the number of on-screen NPCs if if means the game will run better. Running through it makes it dip even further. You can't refute this. Digital Foundry videos are up for everyone to see, including a post-patch comparison
That quote above reveals everything I need to know about you when it comes to this game. You will flat out lie and make excuses for it's shortcomings no matter what. So what if NPCs have realistic cloth physics if they pop in and change colour mere feet away from the player? All I hear from you are excuses for why certain things are shitty. It's pointless arguing about it with you. Your love of the franchise has clearly resulted in you viewing the game through rose-tinted glasses.
Ha, talking of broken gameplay mechanics, I also noticed that Arno has a mind of his own, just like every other AC protagonist, and will climb the wall either side of a window instead of actually going through the window. I'm amazed that they still haven't fixed that.
What I find kind of annoying is that constant hyperbole about the technical aspects of the game has pretty much buried discussion of the gameplay, which I thought was a much bigger dealbreaker. The game just isn't fun, and it doesn't matter if it's running at 24fps or 120fps.
The game is also rendering a huge crowd, which explains the dips. Fine here is subjective. You've barely experienced a fraction of the game yet feel that you can make as many blanket assumptions about it as possible, even ignoring the context of the thread, like the pc version being at the top, as well as excusing GTAV's issues when the same explanations can be applied to AC:Unity. This is technical thread. Should we exclude Crysis 2 because the AI was glitchy? Should we exclude Arma? Please give us your arbritrary rules for why we shouldn't include certain games that btw, you've barely played if you have at all, meaning that your opinion on their technical aspects definitely aren't as well informed as those who have.And to bring it back, the inclusion in this thread is like the "Best PC graphics of 2014" thread based on the pc version. Since it's presented with a pc screenshot.I was clearly referring to the player doing nothing, just like I was talking about the players actions when talking about GTA V's framerate drops. Don't be a smart ass. And in regards to the framerate being "next to perfectly fine when the player is doing things", that is just plain false. The game dips when walking through a crowd. That's laughable. I don't care if there are tons of NPCs on-screen if the game is running at 24fps. I'd gladly take a hit in the number of on-screen NPCs if if means the game will run better. Running through it makes it dip even further. You can't refute this. Digital Foundry videos are up for everyone to see, including a post-patch comparison
That quote above reveals everything I need to know about you when it comes to this game. You will flat out lie and make excuses for it's shortcomings no matter what. So what if NPCs have realistic cloth physics if they pop in and change colour mere feet away from the player? All I hear from you are excuses for why certain things are shitty. It's pointless arguing about it with you. Your love of the franchise has clearly resulted in you viewing the game through rose-tinted glasses.
In that thread a person linked a gif of a person failing while trying to go through a window, another had linked a gif, why is it that Arno responds exactly when I use the correct input yet doesn't seem to for so many people? I've experienced the issues in the previous games that I rarely experience in Unity, like the getting stuck on objects thing=why aren't you holding down R2+O. I could even post a comparison video of me holding the controller while doing so.I detailed my window complaints here:
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showpost.php?p=149473448&postcount=139
They did fix it though, you're just pressing the wrong buttons.
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Another one that I think might be mentioned for 1988 is Reikai Doushi.
Stunning 2D fighting game for the arcades.
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I detailed my window complaints here:
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showpost.php?p=149473448&postcount=139
They did fix it though, you're just pressing the wrong buttons.
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Weren't Ultima Underworld and System Shock considered advanced for their time?
In that thread a person linked a gif of a person failing while trying to go through a window, another had linked a gif, why is it that Arno responds exactly when I use the input given to me yet doesn't seem to for so many people? I could even post a comparison video of me holding the controller while doing so.
I actually thought the combat was pretty good. When I realised that you could no longer insta-chain-kill enemies after parrying the first I was pleasantly surprised. And it seemed genuinely challenging too.
But for me it's too little too late. The game is beyond stale for me now.
I was definitely more impressed by KI's tech. Animations were way better than most 2D games, sprites were huge and very detailed, the moving pre-rendered background were amazing looking, the definition certainly was higher than most games at that time as well.
You're rebuttal to Halo 1 is particle system?
Take the Halo 1 assault rifle, for instance. If you fire it at a wall, you can produce around 10 environmentally-colliding sparks per bullet impact, which happens 15 times per second, allowing you to single-handedly create a crazy spark shower. That's on top of the ejected rounds bouncing around. Note that a lot of particles make noise as they collide in the environments.
And everything is in on the action. Driving around on ice creates loads of ice shard particles. Hitting a natural wall with a rocket creates a massive shower of rock and dirt debris. Hitting something with an overcharged plasma pistol shot causes it to emit sparks for a couple seconds. Etc.
The core of the Halo 1 particle system made it into Halo Anniversary graphics in 2011 with relatively few additions and changes, and even then there were people calling it impressive.
There's nothing "revolutionary" about the "fur effects". They just used existing tech in a novel way (multiple layers of polygonal shells with alpha maps). There isn't anything proprietary about it.
You're rebuttal to Halo 1 is particle system?
Take the Halo 1 assault rifle, for instance. If you fire it at a wall, you can produce around 10 environmentally-colliding sparks per bullet impact, which happens 15 times per second, allowing you to single-handedly create a crazy spark shower. That's on top of the ejected rounds bouncing around. Note that a lot of particles make noise as they collide in the environments.
And everything is in on the action. Driving around on ice creates loads of ice shard particles. Hitting a natural wall with a rocket creates a massive shower of rock and dirt debris. Hitting something with an overcharged plasma pistol shot causes it to emit sparks for a couple seconds. Etc.
The core of the Halo 1 particle system made it into Halo Anniversary graphics in 2011 with relatively few additions and changes, and even then there were people calling it impressive.