• dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    OG Doom does not support (or need) hardware 3D acceleration. It’s not a polygonal rendering engine.

    Relatedly, and probably not to anyone’s surprise, this is why it’s so easy to port to various oddball pieces of hardware. If you have a CPU with enough clocks and memory to run all the calculations, you can get Doom to work since it renders entirely in software. In its original incarnation – modern source ports have since worked around this – it is nonsensical to run Doom at high frame rates anyhow because it has a locked 35 FPS frame rate, tied to the 70hz video mode it ran in. Running it faster would make it… faster.

    (Quake can run in software rendering mode as well with no GPU, but in the OG DOS version only in 320x200 and at that rate I think any modern PC could run it well north of 60 FPS with no GPU acceleration at all.)

    • Num10ck@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      OG Doom engine uses pre-built lookup tables for fixed point trigonometry. (table captures the full 360 degrees for sine and cosine with 10240 elements)

      • DdCno1@kbin.social
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        8 months ago

        Tons of software did this for the longest time. Lookup tables have been a staple of home computing for as long as home computers have existed.

        • barsoap@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          And CPUs still do it to this day. Nasty, nasty maths involved in figuring out an optimal combination between lookup table size and refinement calculations because that output can’t be approximate, it has to work how IEEE floats are supposed to work. Pure numerology.

        • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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          8 months ago

          I really like reading people talk about how better programmers in a more civilized age could do things.

          • DdCno1@kbin.social
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            8 months ago

            Anyone who has ever had to maintain old code will tell you that this more civilized age is right now and that the past was a dark and terrible time.

            Seriously, there were no standards, there was barely any documentation even in large organizations and people did things all the time that would get you fired on the spot today. Sure, you had the occasional wunderkind performing amazing feats on hardware that had no business of running these things, but this was not the norm.

            • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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              8 months ago

              I didn’t have to maintain it, actually I haven’t ever worked as a programmer. But I’ve patched a few FOSS things abandoned around 15-25 years before that to work as a hobby activity, some kind of digital archeology.

              I think people also do things now for which they’d be fired on the spot 20 years ago. Everything changes.

              I suspect what you call “no standards” means in fact “different standards”, but that’s just a cultural difference. Some project from 1995 may use “Hungarian notation” in variable names, well, that was normal then.

              That adequate version control and documentation are, eh, a bit more of a norm now, - yes.

      • TimeSquirrel@kbin.social
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        8 months ago

        Also, this’ll blow your mind too, Doom wasn’t actually 3D. It was a clever trick involving the lack of the ability to look up and down. They used some sort of algorithm (I forget how it works exactly) to turn the 2D walls, doors, and platforms that appear from the top-down view in the map into vertical stacks of lines that “look” like 3D objects in front of you. The sprites are also all just 2D projections overlayed onto the game.

        This system introduced all kinds of wierd quirks in the game, like the trippy effect you get when you activate no-clipping and clip through the edge of the map.

        • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Like for instance, monsters and other sprite objects in the original incarnation of the Doom engine have infinite height. So you can’t step on top of, or over, any monsters if e.g. you are on a ledge high above them. That’s because they’re 2D objects, and their vertical position on the screen is largely only cosmetic. This is why you can’t run under a Cacodemon, for instance.

          “Actors” (monsters, etc.) in Doom do have defined heights, but presumably for speed purposes the engine ignores this except for a small subset of checks, namely for projectile collision and checking whether a monster can enter a sector or if the ceiling height is too low, and for crush damage.

          This was rectified in later versions of the Doom engine as well as most source ports. By the time Heretic came out (which is just chock-a-block full of flying enemies and also allows the player to fly with a powerup) monsters no longer had infinite height.

        • barsoap@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          Most notably perspective only gets calculated on the horizontal axis, vertically there is no perspective projection. Playing the OG graphics with mouse gets trippy fast because of that. Doom doesn’t use much verticality to hide it. Duke Nukem level design uses it more and it’s noticeable but still tolerable. Modern level design with that kind of funk, forget it.

          • frezik@midwest.social
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            8 months ago

            I learned recently that the Jedi Engine for the original Dark Forces had an additional trick. You could have a hallway over another hallway–which Doom cannot–but you can’t see both hallways at the same time. So there might be a bridge over a gorge, but the level design forces it so it’s a covered bridge, and you wouldn’t have an angle where you could see inside the bridge and down into the gorge.

            • barsoap@lemm.ee
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              8 months ago

              Duke Nukem can do that, too, both it and Dark Forces use portal engines while Doom is a BSP engine. With a portal engine you’re not bound to a single global coordinate system, you can make things pass through each other.

              Not actually a feature of the renderer you can do the same using modern rendering tech, though I can’t off the top of my head think of a game that uses it. Certainly none of the big game engines support it out of the box. You can still do it by changing levels and it wouldn’t be hard to do something half-way convincing in the Source engine (Half-Life, Portal, etc, the Valve thing), quick level loading by mere movement is one of its core features, but it isn’t quite as seamless as a true portal engine would be.

            • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              Doom64 accomplished this by adding a silent elevator sector type, so it could have bridges that appear to be floating “over” an underpass that you could walk through but you could also cross over the top. This, of course, immediately got turned into marketing bullshit trying very hard to imply that “Doom64 was fully truly 3D, and the Doom engine could now do room-over-room.”

              Which it can’t. These weren’t bridges, they were cleverly disguised elevators.

              What you eventually notice is that you can never look at one of these bridges from below and then from above, or vise-versa, without first passing through a tunnel or building that completely obscures your view of it. When your view is obstructed, you cross over a trigger somewhere that causes the elevator to, without making any sound (because elevator sounds were hard coded into original Doom), zip up to its cross-over-the-top position or its walk-under-the-bottom position. It could only ever be in one state at a time, never both.

      • DdCno1@kbin.social
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        8 months ago

        Here’s a video that explains the limitations of the DOOM engine and with it also briefly how the rendering part of it works (from 4:08 onward) in a very accessible manner:

        https://youtu.be/ZYGJQqhMN1U

        If you want a more in-depth explanation with a history lesson on top (still accessible, but much heavier), there’s this excellent video:

        https://youtu.be/hYMZsMMlubg

    • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I remember those old games that would run faster to the point of hilarity if you put them on anything more modern than they were originally intended to run on. Like the game timing is tied to the frame rate.

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        This was by and large the reason for the “turbo” buttons on all those 286 and 386 computers back in the day. Disengaging the turbo would artificially slow down your processor to 8086 speed so that all your old games that were timed by processor clock speed and not screen refresh or timers would not be unplayably fast.

        Quite a few more modern games have their physics tied to frame rate – if you manage to run them much faster than the hardware available at the time of their releases could, they freak out. The PC port of Dark Souls was a notorious example, as is Skyrim (at least the OG, non “Legendary Edition” or SE versions).

        • frezik@midwest.social
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          8 months ago

          It’s embarrassing when a modern game does that. Game Programming 101 now tells you to keep physics and graphics loop timing separate. Engines like Unreal and Godot will do it for you out of the box. I’m pretty sure the SDL tutorials I read circa 2003 told you to do it. AAA developers still doing it on this side of 2008 should be dragged outside and shot for the good of the rest of us.

        • ElectricMachman@lemmy.sdf.org
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          8 months ago

          On launch, Spyro: Reignited Trilogy had a level you couldn’t complete unless you changed the settings to lock it to 30fps. It’s probably been patched by now, but was that ever infuriating.

      • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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        8 months ago

        Command and Conquer Generals lets you choose game speed for skirmish matches, the natural cap of 60 and an option to uncap. You need superhuman reflexes to play with an uncapped speed on modern hardware !

      • bcron@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        There used to be dip switches on some older machines (386/486 era), eventually ‘turbo buttons’ that accomplished the same thing, toggling would cut the clock speed so older software would be compatible with clock speed. Those turbo buttons were more a ‘valet mode’ than anything, but it all died out before the Pentium/Athlon era to say the least