
Worldcraft became Hammer, and I really hated Worldcraft... again back then in the Quake II mapping times.
At this point in time I am questioning myself to even include modern pure idtech. I know that's a travesty on my levels especially considering where I am saying this but Id sadly has not been able to keep up with Epic, Crytech, Dice or Valve. It would likely be a better idea for me to replace idtech with the modern engine Titanfall is running now that i think about it.Eraser wrote:No id Tech 5? Seems more useful than speculating about id Tech 6, which hasn't even been announced yet.
Oh also, QOOLE is another Q1/Q2 level editor. It was kinda shitty but had some interesting features nonetheless.
One of the things that sticks out between WorldCraft and Hammer is that, compared to all other editors, they have barely changed! There are differences yes, but they are typically subtle in nature in most cases. Worldcraft to Hammer is like a time capsule. lolAEon wrote:QuArK was the one that let you group brushes, I really liked it back then before GTKradiant. Differing from Qoole is actually let you properly rotate brushwork, Qoole tended to crash. Actually registered QuArK and Qoole.
Worldcraft became Hammer, and I really hated Worldcraft... again back then in the Quake II mapping times.
I wonder if this has been fixed at all. XDEraser wrote:QOOLE was a bit funny in that it saved maps in its own file format, with coordinates as float numbers. When converting to .map format at compile time, these coordinates were converted to ints, which could lead to leaks due to rounding errors. Occurred with rotating geometry and such.
Yeah, its almost like they have quake 3 mappers in their ranks who one day got upset at the lack of caulk lolAEon wrote:After having watched the other TF2 videos, I felt the map was pretty much there, even in texture. That you actually went in an completely redid textures and most of the models, was somewhat of a shock. Funny to see the yellow "caulk" textures TF2 uses.
This point here brings up something that has been mentioned a few times about Valves ideal mapping methodology. Its called density of detail.AEon wrote:I felt that a few areas in the corridors could use a bit more detail, e.g. the floors just had one texture and looked flat, maybe adding some more "patching up" (like repaired areas) might look nice. Some other areas, IIRC, the bases could use slightly more models, and the central area between the trucks looked empty in comparison as well.
Its bad but it didn't feel Team Arena terrain out of brushes bad to me.AEon wrote:I have to admit the mirroring of the map is a real nightmare in TF2, without a mirror tool or add-on, that would really drive me nuts.
IMHO its the industry leading method for creating organic geometry out of brushes.AEon wrote:The mesh manipulation, watching you do that, was really interesting. And that you can apparently paint blending is also quite nifty.
Thanks!AEon wrote:Anyway good job.
The nice thing is it will be short and to the point for a change. My goal is to show the fundamentals of level design by showing the evolution of the FPS. One map for each game!!AEon wrote:Hmmm... going back to *really* old engines, i.e. Wolfenstein, I am not quite sure how instructive that actually is. Personally, I'd probably only go back to about Duke Nuk'em 3D, since that was the last and most modern of 2.5D engine back then. Never built anything for Wolfenstein (did not even play it), so it would still be interesting though.
You could also see it the other way around: have a target framerate you want hit throughout the map (on a certain piece of reference hardware), make sure the most detail heavy locations hit this mark and less important locations can be less detailed. The framerate in those places might increase, but that's not a bad thing, is it?AEon wrote:I just read the link you posted, and I would imagine the bases, where all the action takes place have the lowest frame rate of the whole map.