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2. blur cube view so that all pixels contribute their color equally to the half of the cube view closest to them.
3. use normal mapping to acquire UV coordinates for each vertex of the mesh.
4. texture map the cube view onto the object, except DO NOT USE PIXEL COLORS AS YOU WOULD NORMALLY, instead, use the pixel colors as lighting values, and add those light values to the light already present on the object from traditional lighting methods.
5. Render the scene with it's new light values.
How are you guys thinking about this?
Did anyone ever consider implenting illumination into irrlicht?
Worked out?
And don't think that I'm another newb excepting to create something that is of high quality. I'm just asking, not begging, not expecting..
Offhand, I don't think this article actually describes a workable method to get realtime radiosity for an entire scene. Maybe improved lightingg for an object, but with the loss of directionality (though it should be possible to do it somewhat differently and keep directionality).
Among other things, it suggests rendering a complete cube for each object. Even if you do it at low resolution, that's a whole lot more rendering. Realtime quickly goes out the window.
And as far as being radiosity... if you want the whole scene done this way, you actually have to do it over and over because the objects then become emitters and other objects have to be given the chance to re-emit that light, and this goes back and forth basically forever or until you get bored.
Ah ok... And there isn't a way just to set glossiness of an object? Without rewriting the whole render part of irrlicht.
The main thing I actually want, is volemetric lightning.
This is possible with a transparant cone somehow...
Here's a render I made in 3dsmax showing what I mean:
nvm the poor scene.
Ah thanks. But how to inverse normals?
Do you mean normal texture maps
And I tried this method, it worked good (but looked bad), I just made a normal cone with white texture on it and then transparant... looks bad, I proberly have to flip normals somehow...
I'm not the one asking the first question, but... is there a way to have a haze around that light coming through like a light should? Could that be done with foggy particle effects or something?
I am going to try that effect with adding render to texture to the light mesh.
So I render an animated particle effect to the light texture (for distorsion).
And also I will add a particle effect inside the light mesh(for dust).