this post was submitted on 11 Sep 2023
811 points (98.2% liked)

Games

32666 readers
669 users here now

Welcome to the largest gaming community on Lemmy! Discussion for all kinds of games. Video games, tabletop games, card games etc.

Weekly Threads:

What Are You Playing?

The Weekly Discussion Topic

Rules:

  1. Submissions have to be related to games

  2. No bigotry or harassment, be civil

  3. No excessive self-promotion

  4. Stay on-topic; no memes, funny videos, giveaways, reposts, or low-effort posts

  5. Mark Spoilers and NSFW

  6. No linking to piracy

More information about the community rules can be found here.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

According to Hans-Kristian Arntzen, a prominent open-source developer working on Vkd3d, a DirectX 12 to Vulkan translation layer, Starfield is not interacting properly with graphics card drivers.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] BradleyUffner@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Games, support libraries, and engines don't really support spherical coordinate systems. If you don't want to write everything from scratch, you gotta go Cartesian.

[–] kogasa@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You can still use local Cartesian coordinates.

[–] BradleyUffner@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Sure, I guess, but constantly mapping between them gets complicated and adds overhead. Plus, now you are dealing with curves instead of lines when checking for intersections, and that gets far more expensive to compute when you are trying to do thousands if not millions of checks per frame when trying to run at 60 or 120 frames per second.

I'm not saying it isn't possible, just that games haven't traditionally been written that way, so you can't build on what they have already figured out. That makes it harder to find people who have game dev experience in that kind of math.