Unreal Engine or Doom Engine?
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Unreal Engine or Doom Engine?
IF you got a chance to select DOOM ENGINE and UNREAL ENGINE
Which one will be your choice?
FPS is like a porn movie! Who cares the story?
LIGHT is my strength!
Which one will be your choice?
FPS is like a porn movie! Who cares the story?
LIGHT is my strength!
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I'd imagine he means the latest versions in development. Where's the HL2 engine in there? The modding capabilities are far more appealing to me than pretty graphics, if I could create a game knowing that modding it was a doddle for the end user then I'd give it a crack.
Out of the two above it is Unreal, no question. Unreal is going to be out some time after Doom3 and HL2 though so I wonder if it's a fair comparison.
Out of the two above it is Unreal, no question. Unreal is going to be out some time after Doom3 and HL2 though so I wonder if it's a fair comparison.
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did somebody see the unreal 3 demo videos and pics? i think there is no question witch is better
this is better than a prerendered pixar movie! the problem is that engine is not compatibly with computers in the 21 century one model has more texture and geometrical information than unreal "1"
this is better than a prerendered pixar movie! the problem is that engine is not compatibly with computers in the 21 century one model has more texture and geometrical information than unreal "1"
q|^.^|p beeing every time friendly to everyone
sys: 2500+Barton 512MB 6600GT WinXP
sys: 2500+Barton 512MB 6600GT WinXP
AFAIR UE3 runs on latest nvidia cards (don't remeber actual number) and also uses technics similar to Doom 3 ones.
Tomasz Nowakowski
Openoko - www.openoko.pl
Openoko - www.openoko.pl
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HL2 engine...you mean SOURCE ENGINE.. yah it is gud...
My op is that if I want to develop an indoor game I will choose DOOM 3
and if I want to develop an out door game I will choose UNREAL 2
and if I want to develop a game as my hobby I will choose IRRLICHT
LIGHT is my strength!
My op is that if I want to develop an indoor game I will choose DOOM 3
and if I want to develop an out door game I will choose UNREAL 2
and if I want to develop a game as my hobby I will choose IRRLICHT
FPS is like a porn movie! Who cares the story?
LIGHT is my strength!
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As an actual game, I am looking forward to Doom 3 far more than HL2 or Unreal ( either 3 or Tornament ). Half Life was pretty cool but the second one will never live up to the hype, both Unreal games have been crap IMO, I hate the tournament game. Doom 3 actually looks like the only one to have any atmosphere as well as being a good shooter, recreating Doom can only be a good thing as it's so simplistic you can't go wrong
I think D3 looks pretty damn good, pic:
I think D3 looks pretty damn good, pic:
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I'll wait for HL2 and S.T.A.L.K.E.R. before making statements who's the winner. But at this point, for me, S.T.A.L.K.E.R. is the leader.
Tomasz Nowakowski
Openoko - www.openoko.pl
Openoko - www.openoko.pl
I think Unreal 2.5 -> 3 is going to surprise a lot of ppl. Doom3 code is supposedly finished in majority and they are working on the art assests and levels etc.
BTW the unreal 3 demos were running on Athlon 2000XP with 1024mb (or something similar I think) but the big thing was they were running on a GeForce6800. Other vid cards can only make 5pfs......it is the GeForce 6800 that makes it possible in real time.
BTW I think Unreal is going to be King - by the time HL2 and Doom3 actually come out Unreal 3 will be close to realase and will be probably a bit better due to having followed the others
BTW the unreal 3 demos were running on Athlon 2000XP with 1024mb (or something similar I think) but the big thing was they were running on a GeForce6800. Other vid cards can only make 5pfs......it is the GeForce 6800 that makes it possible in real time.
BTW I think Unreal is going to be King - by the time HL2 and Doom3 actually come out Unreal 3 will be close to realase and will be probably a bit better due to having followed the others
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What is Doom 3? (Back)
Doom 3 is the unofficial name for id Software's next full game. The game was unofficially announced on June 1, 2000, in a .plan update by John Carmack:
Well, this is going to be an interesting .plan update.
Most of this is not really public business, but if some things aren't stated explicitly, it will reflect unfairly on someone.
As many people have heard discussed, there was quite a desire to remake DOOM as our next project after Q3. Discussing it brought an almost palpable thrill to most of the employees, but Adrian had a strong enough dislike for the idea that it was shot down over and over again.
Design work on an alternate game has been going on in parallel with the mission pack development and my research work.
Several factors, including a general lack of enthusiasm for the proposed plan, the warmth that Wolfenstein was met with at E3, and excitement about what we can do with the latest rendering technology were making it seem more and more like we weren't going down the right path.
I discussed it with some of the other guys, and we decided that it was important enough to drag the company through an unpleasant fight over it.
An ultimatum was issued to Kevin and Adrian(who control >50% of the company): We are working on DOOM for the next project unless you fire us.
Obviously no fun for anyone involved, but the project direction was changed, new hires have been expedited, and the design work has begun.
It wasn't planned to announce this soon, but here it is: We are working on a new DOOM game, focusing on the single player game experience, and using brand new technology in almost every aspect of it. That is all we are prepared to say about the game for quite some time, so don't push for interviews. We will talk about it when things are actually built, to avoid giving misleading comments.
Will the game be called Doom 3? (Back)
id Software has never officially called the new Doom game by any specific title, instead calling it "the next incarnation of DOOM," "a new DOOM game," and other such things. id Software has registered the domain name doom2000.com, but this name would be strange considering the game will probably not be released before 2002. "Doom 3" is another obvious choice and one which might be used given id's tradition of simply numbering sequels (Doom/Doom 2, Quake/Quake 2/Quake 3). However, the game has no official name as of now, and we call it "Doom 3" simply as a easy way to refer to it.
Who is creating Doom 3? (Back)
The new Doom game is being created by id Software, the makers of Doom and Doom 2. Here is a list of those associated with Doom 3:
Programmers:
John Carmack
Jim Dose
Jan Paul van Waveren
Robert Duffy
Graeme Devine
Level designers:
Paul Jaquays
Tim Willits
Christian Antkow
Malvern Blackwell
Artists:
Adrian Carmack
Kevin Cloud
Kenneth Scott
Seneca Menard
Fred Nilsson
Music:
Trent Reznor?
Misc:
Marty Stratton (biz guy)
Eric Webb (intern / tech support)
Todd Hollenshead (CEO)
Donna Jackson (id mom)
What sort of engine will Doom 3 use? (Back)
The Doom 3 engine is going to be an extremely modified version of the Quake 3 codebase, if not an entirely new engine. On 9/18/00, John Carmack gave the impression that while the prospect of creating an entirely new engine from scratch was tantalizing, he had decided that there is no point in reinventing the wheel: "it is a huge help to have all the existing facilities of player movement, weapons, third person, noclip, cvars, console commands, etc, all present while I just concentrated on new rendering algorithms." However, on 10/23/00 Jim Dose had the following to say:
The engine is being completely rewritten, just piece-by-piece. Currently, the renderer, shader system, and game code are completely new. The cgame and network code have been removed. The animation system is currently being written from the ground up. The sound system and UI are still in place, but will be rewritten by Graeme and Robert when they are finished with the mission pack. At some point along the way, John will probably write a new network system.
So, even though we are not starting out with a blank sheet of paper, the final result will be a full rewrite.
1) Graphics
Doom 3 will use an entirely new rendering engine. Possible features in the new engine include things such as fully-dynamic lighting with no predetermined lightmaps (something John Carmack has been interested in for a while) and 3D textures. On 8/9/00 Carmack said that "one of the primary functions of our next-generation technology is trying to do everything with bump-mapping and dot products." On 9/20/00 he seemed to confirm that there will be support for bump mapping via both artist-produced bumpmaps and procedural bumpmaps. On 2/21/01 John Carmack showed off the Doom 3 engine for the first time at the MacWorld expo. He had the following to say about it, among other things:
"We've been doing hacks and tricks for years, but now we'll be able to do things we've been wanting to do for a long time," Carmack said. "For instance, every light has its own highlight and every surface casts a shadow, like in the real world. Everything can behave the same now and we can apply effects for every pixel."
2) Sound
Unlike previous id Software games, Doom 3 will have a programmer dedicated to the sound code. This suggests that Doom 3 will feature full EAX compatibility, as well as more nifty features which we can only imagine at the moment.
In a 9/20/00 interview, John Carmack let slip the following information regarding the new sound code:
Graeme's primary task is going to be a completely new sound engine. Coupled with the fact that this will be the first project where I am comfortable using threads (previously the cross-platform issues have nixed it for me) for required background streaming, we should have quite literally an order of magnitude more audio richness than in our previous games.
On 2/21/01, Jim Dosé said the following about the sound system in the Doom 3 engine:
Jim: We hope to go really far with the sound in Doom. Probably the best thing about FAKK?s system was the fact that it gave the sound designer a lot of control over sound in the game and we want to have the control and editing support in Doom to be just as good, if not better. Graeme is spending a lot of time developing a robust sound system and Robert is developing a user interface that allows us to quickly setup in-game editing facilities, so I think we should be able to give Doom?s sound the justice it deserves.
3) Networking
Doom 3 will almost certainly include Quake-style client/server TCP/IP networking code. There will probably not be a peer-to-peer networking feature, nor a modem-to-modem direct-dialup connection.
John Carmack had the following to say on 9/18/00 when asked about exploiting a broadband-only design target:
The biggest thing that broadband will do is just save a lot of twitchy programmer time spent optimizing for the modem straw. This will increase flexibility and let developers concentrate on making the environment and game play more fun. Clearly, that is a good thing all by itself.
Voice (probably with several optional vocoders) is a no-brainer once we get more bandwidth, and even talking-head webcam video becomes a useful possibility.
I'm not sure of the exact utility of it, but it becomes feasible to send and receive packets from multiple sources on a real-time basis, which you can't afford to do with a modem. This may enable some architectures that are more clustered instead of the binary boundary of client / server.
4) Game Logic
Doom 3 will use DLLs for the game code much as Quake 2 did. John Carmack has expressed his interest in creating some sort of QuakeC-ish simplified coding language which would make mods a simpler affair than in the Quake 3 engine.
5) Physics
In a Planetcrap.com post on 11/15/00, Jim Dose had the following to say about a handful of popular 3D engines:
By this time next year, most, if not all, of the games made with these engines will use a fully featured physics engine, if not developed internally by the developer, then licensed from someone like Havoc or MathEngine.
While not a hard-and-fast proof of any sort, this seems to strongly indicate that the Doom 3 engine will have a realistic physics model.
6) Tools
As opposed to earlier id games, Doom 3 is being developed on the same machines it is intended to play on. This means that all the tools that id Software will be using to create Doom will be available to the average gamer, with no need for specific hardware. In fact, the Doom development tools will be integrated with the game code, and will be accessible from the same executable. As John Carmack had to say on 9/18/00:
The decisions to integrate all tools (editor and map processing) directly into the executable, and to make map source data required for loading in addition to derived data, make the new game far and away the easiest to create content for. Every installation that can play the game can edit the game.
Also, I have banished the last of the binary file formats, so everything (except standard data files like .wav and .tga) is now in easily explored and understood text files.
7) Models
All of the following in this section is speculation but it does seem to make a certain amount of sense, so I would go out on a limb and wager than while the details might be wrong, the underlying idea is probably correct.
In a statement in 1/01 on the Polycount boards, "Wrath," ex lead animator at Ion Storm, had the following to say about the Doom tech:
"Ayup...that's 500,000 poly models. I saw them, they were in game though probably not the way you think. The high poly version of the models were being used as the reference for all the cool lighting effects...the self-shadowing, bump mapping, displacements, etc. That info was being projected onto a much smaller version of the model, maybe 1500 polys or so. The high poly versions were untextured, the low poly models were using 3 or 4 256x256 skins I THINK. They were very hush hush about specifics."
"I dunno how exactly the magic was working, all I know is that they're starting with insanely detailed models, using them for all the lighting info, and passing that info on to the decimated skinned model that's actually running about in game. Not that you would be able to tell. You get close enough to a model, you can see the creases in fingers. All looking incredible."
Now, here's a tentative explanation by Zaldron in the Doomworld forums from 7/19/01. I know this is a long quote, but it sounds to me that this trick is on par with the initial realization in the Quake engine of calculating lighting information beforehand and storing it in the map data, so I think such a long quote is warranted.
Now, you have 2 models. One of them is the one you made for the game, it contains only mesh structure for the FIRST frame AND skinning parameters (that is the X, Y, U and V coordinates for every triangle).
If you wanna know what X, Y, U, V, H, X, 545, Hoolapalazac, etc etc are. It's quite simple : A "skin" is made from several images. Artists prefer to use one whole image for the head and neck, the other one for the torso and arms, and the other one for the pelvis and legs. Anyway, each triangle is painted with several pixels of those pics, how? Simple, choose the X and Y coordinates on where it starts borrowing from the pic, and then the U and V numbers tell the engine the horizontal and vertical percentaje of the pic being used.
Anyway, the thing is that X, Y and Z coords for EVERY vertex, the joined edges, the skinning parameters, the normals data and the sub-materials values mean a LOT of SPACE = LOT OF RAM.
That's why the 500k one is untextured. Otherwise it would occupy several megs.
Traditional animation says : 1 frame = one different mesh. This is a horrible, horrible waste, because the size required to store "mesh form" is enlarged as many frames there is. That's why id moved to skeletal. Both the low poly and the high poly versions contain only one frame of animation, commonly the shape of the creature in a non-complex gesture, as standing with both arms stretched.
Now, the hi-poly is user for shadow/bump calculations. Since it's not being rendered, it doesn't need all that skin data, but the model keeps eating a fair amount of RAM.
Anyway, we have 2 models. The hi poly model is being hit by the lightrays in the game, resulting in both shadow/highlight pixel values, and bumpmap results.
Have you ever seen a really good texture job in a model? It generally makes up for the jaggy edges. Now, taking this data in account, the textures will be upgraded by both the shadows and the bumpmaps in real time, as I explained in my article. But this time the position data comes from a MUCH MORE ACCURATE model, meaning that the result will not match the low poly mesh, but actually looking better.
Hard to understand? Imagine a 3 faced finger. Bleh. Anyway, a bumpmap over that finger would look horrible, because you can clearly see how the bumpmap takes in consideration that mesh, and draw some accurate results FOR A 3 FACED FINGER, NOT A NICE ONE. With id's method, the bumpmap will come from the NICE FINGER, and skinned over the CRAPPY FINGER, will make the CRAPPY FINGER look like the NICE FINGER -IN THE INSIDE-
Why did I added that "IN THE INSIDE"? Hard edges are still there, and that's why I'm saying 1500 is way too low. Because the 500k poly will make shadows and bumpmaps look real-like, but the low poly is the one being rendered, and it still has those hard edges.
It's like rendering the 500k poly with all the textures and ligthing and poop, but then cutting the shape of the low poly one all around it.
Animation
In a 2/20/01 interview, Fred Nilsson had the following to say about the animation system that will be utilized in Doom 3:
Fred: We have a great pipeline in place already.. I can import a model from Lightwave or 3DSMax. Set it up with bones.. Adjust the deformations. Then export it right into the game.. We can even do cameras etc. So.. Making cinematics should be a blast..
It is also known that id Software has been using Maya for their Doom 3 modelling/animating work as well.
What sort of system will be required to play Doom 3? (Back)
Early indications suggest that the target system for Doom 3 will be a 700 mhz system with 128 megabytes of RAM and a "high-end" video card (assumably GeForce-level or higher). However, these specs are very tentative and will probably change multiple times. There will probably be versions released for Windows, Linux, and Mac.
In an interview on 9/18/00, John Carmack had the following to say about the Doom 3 engine and how fast it will run:
I am spending a huge amount of graphics horsepower to allow the engine to be flexible in ways that game engines have never been before. It is a little scary to drop down from the ultra-high frame rates we are used to with Q3, but I firmly believe that the power of the new engine will enable a whole new level of game content.
I am hoping that the absolute top-of-the-line system available when the game ships will be capable of running it with all features enabled and anti-aliasing on at 60hz, but even the fastest cards of today are going to have to run at fairly low resolutions to get decent frame rates. Many will choose to drop a feature or two to get some speed back, but they still won't be able to get near 60hz.
Remember, the game won't ship for a long time yet, and today's cards will seem a bit quaint by then.
Will there be any console ports of Doom 3? (Back)
An X-Box port is all but certain, according to John Carmack. As for Dreamcast and the Playstation 2, John Carmack said the following on 8/9/00:
Depending on how our next project actually turns out, I certainly wouldn't rule out a Dreamcast version, but at 16MB of memory, whatever we do, our next project is going to be more linear in nature so it should be easier. It might be a matter of turning every mission into a half-point or something like that, but that involves much more work. It's going to be a matter of going back in and actually redesigning some of the levels. And that would be a significant undertaking--it would require new content, significantly new code architecture, and all that. Now PlayStation2 is a more interesting question, because it's halfway in between the Dreamcast and Xbox on memory, and it's got a good processor, but there are some sticking points with the graphics that are just really, really unfortunate. PlayStation2 took the tack of having the simplest graphics rasterizer that it can get and because it's all embedded DRAM it's blazingly fast on there, but there's some capabilities that just aren't there.
One of the primary functions of our next-generation technology is trying to do everything with bump-mapping and dot products, and that math just isn't there on the PlayStation2...I'm not sure if it's going to be able to do the full-impact stuff we can do on the Xbox. We could certainly do a cut-down version that will run on the PlayStation2 and Dreamcast, but it won't have the incredible next-generation graphics look that we're going to see on the next generation of PC chips.
What sort of gameplay will Doom 3 have? (Back)
The press release officially announcing the new Doom game on 6/5/00 describes the new Doom as being a "over-the-top, story-based single-player experience." However, specifics about Doom 3's gameplay will probably not be discussed until shortly before the game is released, as what made the original Doom so popular is always a subject of arguments.
A few scant facts are known:
According to a 8/15/00 interview with Mr. Elusive, one of his tasks with the Doom 3 engine will be working on the scripting, which seems to suggest that the game will feature scripted sequences.
In that same interview, Mr. Elusive said that while all the monsters would probably share a common basic AI, they would have different individual characteristics and personalities.
In a 10/28/00 interview, lead level designer Tim Willits had the following to say about an area he would like to explore in Doom 3:
Giving players information. We need to find better ways of giving players the information they need to advance through the game. Sidekicks and computers have been done before. As developers, we need to find more creative ways of giving players the information they need to progress as they play the game, and that's what we're hoping to do in DOOM.
When will Doom 3 be released? (Back)
As the game has barely started production, there is no set release date, but knowledge of the average game development cycle seems to suggest a release date sometime in 2002.
Will there be a demo? (Back)
As John Carmack said in a 9/20/00 interview:
There will certainly be a test. I am a firm believer in the benefits to the final product of doing that.
Q3Test was released too far ahead of the commercial product. The game engine was nearly ready to ship, but the bot code was still completely unresolved, and wound up causing the real ship date to be much later than expected. We will probably try to have a test for the next product much closer to full beta time.
Don't hold your breath.
Are there any pictures available? (Back)
But of course. Here are 37 shots taken from the technology demo John Carmack showed off at the MacWorld expo. If you want to watch the presentation for yourself, we have a 13.9 meg ASF here.
What was this other game that id was planning on making instead of Doom 3? (Back)
Originally, id Software was planning on creating a MMORPG-ish game code-named "Quest." Graeme Devine described the game this way on 8/4/00:
Quest would have combined the RPG massively multiplayer ideas of an game like Everquest with the multiple server features of a Quake-style game. Devine said Quest would have a small party of five, like a fighter, barbarian and magic user, and the players could sign on to a Quest server and have it be a different server with different missions and quests. "You were there on your own," Devine said, "You and your five buddies against the world."
Each server would have been run by a person akin to a Dungeon Master in Dungeons and Dragons who would have been in control of the enviroments the players found themselves in, right down to the rats crawling around on the ground.
Doom 3 is the unofficial name for id Software's next full game. The game was unofficially announced on June 1, 2000, in a .plan update by John Carmack:
Well, this is going to be an interesting .plan update.
Most of this is not really public business, but if some things aren't stated explicitly, it will reflect unfairly on someone.
As many people have heard discussed, there was quite a desire to remake DOOM as our next project after Q3. Discussing it brought an almost palpable thrill to most of the employees, but Adrian had a strong enough dislike for the idea that it was shot down over and over again.
Design work on an alternate game has been going on in parallel with the mission pack development and my research work.
Several factors, including a general lack of enthusiasm for the proposed plan, the warmth that Wolfenstein was met with at E3, and excitement about what we can do with the latest rendering technology were making it seem more and more like we weren't going down the right path.
I discussed it with some of the other guys, and we decided that it was important enough to drag the company through an unpleasant fight over it.
An ultimatum was issued to Kevin and Adrian(who control >50% of the company): We are working on DOOM for the next project unless you fire us.
Obviously no fun for anyone involved, but the project direction was changed, new hires have been expedited, and the design work has begun.
It wasn't planned to announce this soon, but here it is: We are working on a new DOOM game, focusing on the single player game experience, and using brand new technology in almost every aspect of it. That is all we are prepared to say about the game for quite some time, so don't push for interviews. We will talk about it when things are actually built, to avoid giving misleading comments.
Will the game be called Doom 3? (Back)
id Software has never officially called the new Doom game by any specific title, instead calling it "the next incarnation of DOOM," "a new DOOM game," and other such things. id Software has registered the domain name doom2000.com, but this name would be strange considering the game will probably not be released before 2002. "Doom 3" is another obvious choice and one which might be used given id's tradition of simply numbering sequels (Doom/Doom 2, Quake/Quake 2/Quake 3). However, the game has no official name as of now, and we call it "Doom 3" simply as a easy way to refer to it.
Who is creating Doom 3? (Back)
The new Doom game is being created by id Software, the makers of Doom and Doom 2. Here is a list of those associated with Doom 3:
Programmers:
John Carmack
Jim Dose
Jan Paul van Waveren
Robert Duffy
Graeme Devine
Level designers:
Paul Jaquays
Tim Willits
Christian Antkow
Malvern Blackwell
Artists:
Adrian Carmack
Kevin Cloud
Kenneth Scott
Seneca Menard
Fred Nilsson
Music:
Trent Reznor?
Misc:
Marty Stratton (biz guy)
Eric Webb (intern / tech support)
Todd Hollenshead (CEO)
Donna Jackson (id mom)
What sort of engine will Doom 3 use? (Back)
The Doom 3 engine is going to be an extremely modified version of the Quake 3 codebase, if not an entirely new engine. On 9/18/00, John Carmack gave the impression that while the prospect of creating an entirely new engine from scratch was tantalizing, he had decided that there is no point in reinventing the wheel: "it is a huge help to have all the existing facilities of player movement, weapons, third person, noclip, cvars, console commands, etc, all present while I just concentrated on new rendering algorithms." However, on 10/23/00 Jim Dose had the following to say:
The engine is being completely rewritten, just piece-by-piece. Currently, the renderer, shader system, and game code are completely new. The cgame and network code have been removed. The animation system is currently being written from the ground up. The sound system and UI are still in place, but will be rewritten by Graeme and Robert when they are finished with the mission pack. At some point along the way, John will probably write a new network system.
So, even though we are not starting out with a blank sheet of paper, the final result will be a full rewrite.
1) Graphics
Doom 3 will use an entirely new rendering engine. Possible features in the new engine include things such as fully-dynamic lighting with no predetermined lightmaps (something John Carmack has been interested in for a while) and 3D textures. On 8/9/00 Carmack said that "one of the primary functions of our next-generation technology is trying to do everything with bump-mapping and dot products." On 9/20/00 he seemed to confirm that there will be support for bump mapping via both artist-produced bumpmaps and procedural bumpmaps. On 2/21/01 John Carmack showed off the Doom 3 engine for the first time at the MacWorld expo. He had the following to say about it, among other things:
"We've been doing hacks and tricks for years, but now we'll be able to do things we've been wanting to do for a long time," Carmack said. "For instance, every light has its own highlight and every surface casts a shadow, like in the real world. Everything can behave the same now and we can apply effects for every pixel."
2) Sound
Unlike previous id Software games, Doom 3 will have a programmer dedicated to the sound code. This suggests that Doom 3 will feature full EAX compatibility, as well as more nifty features which we can only imagine at the moment.
In a 9/20/00 interview, John Carmack let slip the following information regarding the new sound code:
Graeme's primary task is going to be a completely new sound engine. Coupled with the fact that this will be the first project where I am comfortable using threads (previously the cross-platform issues have nixed it for me) for required background streaming, we should have quite literally an order of magnitude more audio richness than in our previous games.
On 2/21/01, Jim Dosé said the following about the sound system in the Doom 3 engine:
Jim: We hope to go really far with the sound in Doom. Probably the best thing about FAKK?s system was the fact that it gave the sound designer a lot of control over sound in the game and we want to have the control and editing support in Doom to be just as good, if not better. Graeme is spending a lot of time developing a robust sound system and Robert is developing a user interface that allows us to quickly setup in-game editing facilities, so I think we should be able to give Doom?s sound the justice it deserves.
3) Networking
Doom 3 will almost certainly include Quake-style client/server TCP/IP networking code. There will probably not be a peer-to-peer networking feature, nor a modem-to-modem direct-dialup connection.
John Carmack had the following to say on 9/18/00 when asked about exploiting a broadband-only design target:
The biggest thing that broadband will do is just save a lot of twitchy programmer time spent optimizing for the modem straw. This will increase flexibility and let developers concentrate on making the environment and game play more fun. Clearly, that is a good thing all by itself.
Voice (probably with several optional vocoders) is a no-brainer once we get more bandwidth, and even talking-head webcam video becomes a useful possibility.
I'm not sure of the exact utility of it, but it becomes feasible to send and receive packets from multiple sources on a real-time basis, which you can't afford to do with a modem. This may enable some architectures that are more clustered instead of the binary boundary of client / server.
4) Game Logic
Doom 3 will use DLLs for the game code much as Quake 2 did. John Carmack has expressed his interest in creating some sort of QuakeC-ish simplified coding language which would make mods a simpler affair than in the Quake 3 engine.
5) Physics
In a Planetcrap.com post on 11/15/00, Jim Dose had the following to say about a handful of popular 3D engines:
By this time next year, most, if not all, of the games made with these engines will use a fully featured physics engine, if not developed internally by the developer, then licensed from someone like Havoc or MathEngine.
While not a hard-and-fast proof of any sort, this seems to strongly indicate that the Doom 3 engine will have a realistic physics model.
6) Tools
As opposed to earlier id games, Doom 3 is being developed on the same machines it is intended to play on. This means that all the tools that id Software will be using to create Doom will be available to the average gamer, with no need for specific hardware. In fact, the Doom development tools will be integrated with the game code, and will be accessible from the same executable. As John Carmack had to say on 9/18/00:
The decisions to integrate all tools (editor and map processing) directly into the executable, and to make map source data required for loading in addition to derived data, make the new game far and away the easiest to create content for. Every installation that can play the game can edit the game.
Also, I have banished the last of the binary file formats, so everything (except standard data files like .wav and .tga) is now in easily explored and understood text files.
7) Models
All of the following in this section is speculation but it does seem to make a certain amount of sense, so I would go out on a limb and wager than while the details might be wrong, the underlying idea is probably correct.
In a statement in 1/01 on the Polycount boards, "Wrath," ex lead animator at Ion Storm, had the following to say about the Doom tech:
"Ayup...that's 500,000 poly models. I saw them, they were in game though probably not the way you think. The high poly version of the models were being used as the reference for all the cool lighting effects...the self-shadowing, bump mapping, displacements, etc. That info was being projected onto a much smaller version of the model, maybe 1500 polys or so. The high poly versions were untextured, the low poly models were using 3 or 4 256x256 skins I THINK. They were very hush hush about specifics."
"I dunno how exactly the magic was working, all I know is that they're starting with insanely detailed models, using them for all the lighting info, and passing that info on to the decimated skinned model that's actually running about in game. Not that you would be able to tell. You get close enough to a model, you can see the creases in fingers. All looking incredible."
Now, here's a tentative explanation by Zaldron in the Doomworld forums from 7/19/01. I know this is a long quote, but it sounds to me that this trick is on par with the initial realization in the Quake engine of calculating lighting information beforehand and storing it in the map data, so I think such a long quote is warranted.
Now, you have 2 models. One of them is the one you made for the game, it contains only mesh structure for the FIRST frame AND skinning parameters (that is the X, Y, U and V coordinates for every triangle).
If you wanna know what X, Y, U, V, H, X, 545, Hoolapalazac, etc etc are. It's quite simple : A "skin" is made from several images. Artists prefer to use one whole image for the head and neck, the other one for the torso and arms, and the other one for the pelvis and legs. Anyway, each triangle is painted with several pixels of those pics, how? Simple, choose the X and Y coordinates on where it starts borrowing from the pic, and then the U and V numbers tell the engine the horizontal and vertical percentaje of the pic being used.
Anyway, the thing is that X, Y and Z coords for EVERY vertex, the joined edges, the skinning parameters, the normals data and the sub-materials values mean a LOT of SPACE = LOT OF RAM.
That's why the 500k one is untextured. Otherwise it would occupy several megs.
Traditional animation says : 1 frame = one different mesh. This is a horrible, horrible waste, because the size required to store "mesh form" is enlarged as many frames there is. That's why id moved to skeletal. Both the low poly and the high poly versions contain only one frame of animation, commonly the shape of the creature in a non-complex gesture, as standing with both arms stretched.
Now, the hi-poly is user for shadow/bump calculations. Since it's not being rendered, it doesn't need all that skin data, but the model keeps eating a fair amount of RAM.
Anyway, we have 2 models. The hi poly model is being hit by the lightrays in the game, resulting in both shadow/highlight pixel values, and bumpmap results.
Have you ever seen a really good texture job in a model? It generally makes up for the jaggy edges. Now, taking this data in account, the textures will be upgraded by both the shadows and the bumpmaps in real time, as I explained in my article. But this time the position data comes from a MUCH MORE ACCURATE model, meaning that the result will not match the low poly mesh, but actually looking better.
Hard to understand? Imagine a 3 faced finger. Bleh. Anyway, a bumpmap over that finger would look horrible, because you can clearly see how the bumpmap takes in consideration that mesh, and draw some accurate results FOR A 3 FACED FINGER, NOT A NICE ONE. With id's method, the bumpmap will come from the NICE FINGER, and skinned over the CRAPPY FINGER, will make the CRAPPY FINGER look like the NICE FINGER -IN THE INSIDE-
Why did I added that "IN THE INSIDE"? Hard edges are still there, and that's why I'm saying 1500 is way too low. Because the 500k poly will make shadows and bumpmaps look real-like, but the low poly is the one being rendered, and it still has those hard edges.
It's like rendering the 500k poly with all the textures and ligthing and poop, but then cutting the shape of the low poly one all around it.
Animation
In a 2/20/01 interview, Fred Nilsson had the following to say about the animation system that will be utilized in Doom 3:
Fred: We have a great pipeline in place already.. I can import a model from Lightwave or 3DSMax. Set it up with bones.. Adjust the deformations. Then export it right into the game.. We can even do cameras etc. So.. Making cinematics should be a blast..
It is also known that id Software has been using Maya for their Doom 3 modelling/animating work as well.
What sort of system will be required to play Doom 3? (Back)
Early indications suggest that the target system for Doom 3 will be a 700 mhz system with 128 megabytes of RAM and a "high-end" video card (assumably GeForce-level or higher). However, these specs are very tentative and will probably change multiple times. There will probably be versions released for Windows, Linux, and Mac.
In an interview on 9/18/00, John Carmack had the following to say about the Doom 3 engine and how fast it will run:
I am spending a huge amount of graphics horsepower to allow the engine to be flexible in ways that game engines have never been before. It is a little scary to drop down from the ultra-high frame rates we are used to with Q3, but I firmly believe that the power of the new engine will enable a whole new level of game content.
I am hoping that the absolute top-of-the-line system available when the game ships will be capable of running it with all features enabled and anti-aliasing on at 60hz, but even the fastest cards of today are going to have to run at fairly low resolutions to get decent frame rates. Many will choose to drop a feature or two to get some speed back, but they still won't be able to get near 60hz.
Remember, the game won't ship for a long time yet, and today's cards will seem a bit quaint by then.
Will there be any console ports of Doom 3? (Back)
An X-Box port is all but certain, according to John Carmack. As for Dreamcast and the Playstation 2, John Carmack said the following on 8/9/00:
Depending on how our next project actually turns out, I certainly wouldn't rule out a Dreamcast version, but at 16MB of memory, whatever we do, our next project is going to be more linear in nature so it should be easier. It might be a matter of turning every mission into a half-point or something like that, but that involves much more work. It's going to be a matter of going back in and actually redesigning some of the levels. And that would be a significant undertaking--it would require new content, significantly new code architecture, and all that. Now PlayStation2 is a more interesting question, because it's halfway in between the Dreamcast and Xbox on memory, and it's got a good processor, but there are some sticking points with the graphics that are just really, really unfortunate. PlayStation2 took the tack of having the simplest graphics rasterizer that it can get and because it's all embedded DRAM it's blazingly fast on there, but there's some capabilities that just aren't there.
One of the primary functions of our next-generation technology is trying to do everything with bump-mapping and dot products, and that math just isn't there on the PlayStation2...I'm not sure if it's going to be able to do the full-impact stuff we can do on the Xbox. We could certainly do a cut-down version that will run on the PlayStation2 and Dreamcast, but it won't have the incredible next-generation graphics look that we're going to see on the next generation of PC chips.
What sort of gameplay will Doom 3 have? (Back)
The press release officially announcing the new Doom game on 6/5/00 describes the new Doom as being a "over-the-top, story-based single-player experience." However, specifics about Doom 3's gameplay will probably not be discussed until shortly before the game is released, as what made the original Doom so popular is always a subject of arguments.
A few scant facts are known:
According to a 8/15/00 interview with Mr. Elusive, one of his tasks with the Doom 3 engine will be working on the scripting, which seems to suggest that the game will feature scripted sequences.
In that same interview, Mr. Elusive said that while all the monsters would probably share a common basic AI, they would have different individual characteristics and personalities.
In a 10/28/00 interview, lead level designer Tim Willits had the following to say about an area he would like to explore in Doom 3:
Giving players information. We need to find better ways of giving players the information they need to advance through the game. Sidekicks and computers have been done before. As developers, we need to find more creative ways of giving players the information they need to progress as they play the game, and that's what we're hoping to do in DOOM.
When will Doom 3 be released? (Back)
As the game has barely started production, there is no set release date, but knowledge of the average game development cycle seems to suggest a release date sometime in 2002.
Will there be a demo? (Back)
As John Carmack said in a 9/20/00 interview:
There will certainly be a test. I am a firm believer in the benefits to the final product of doing that.
Q3Test was released too far ahead of the commercial product. The game engine was nearly ready to ship, but the bot code was still completely unresolved, and wound up causing the real ship date to be much later than expected. We will probably try to have a test for the next product much closer to full beta time.
Don't hold your breath.
Are there any pictures available? (Back)
But of course. Here are 37 shots taken from the technology demo John Carmack showed off at the MacWorld expo. If you want to watch the presentation for yourself, we have a 13.9 meg ASF here.
What was this other game that id was planning on making instead of Doom 3? (Back)
Originally, id Software was planning on creating a MMORPG-ish game code-named "Quest." Graeme Devine described the game this way on 8/4/00:
Quest would have combined the RPG massively multiplayer ideas of an game like Everquest with the multiple server features of a Quake-style game. Devine said Quest would have a small party of five, like a fighter, barbarian and magic user, and the players could sign on to a Quest server and have it be a different server with different missions and quests. "You were there on your own," Devine said, "You and your five buddies against the world."
Each server would have been run by a person akin to a Dungeon Master in Dungeons and Dragons who would have been in control of the enviroments the players found themselves in, right down to the rats crawling around on the ground.