nobody attacks the supply unless they have a specific reason or timing for it- in general, it's got too many HP and too easily replaced to justify spending attacking unit time on it
Also, one problem that can emerge is that there will be no way of getting back into the game once you make a mistake, which there should be (to an extent ofc).
well, people who play like that will go to the bottom of the ladder and only play against each other, and the people who don't will go to the top and only play against each other.
there is no way in which defending, as a core strategy, is effective.
the defender has a few advantages, which may counter a small advantage that the attacker possessed from some previous action, but even when abused to the max, will never come close to making pure defensive play viable.
If you were on 4chan playing chess and a player made a stupid move, maybe it's not a valid strategy whatsoever. Maybe the move involves putting your queen in danger.. the player who made that move doesn't care about winning
there are two kinds of players: those who play to win, and those who play for fun
if you're playing to win, then winning is winning, and a free win is a good thing
if you play for fun, then you find some players who play in a style you find fun to play against, and you play almost exclusively against them- against your friends who don't dick you around.
in neither case is it possible to have a sustained problem.
trolls are the vast minority of the population, they don't make friends and they don't win the game, so it's hard for any player to have a sustained problem with them.
The next time you want to check out pre-defined macros supported by GCC on a platform, run the preprocessor with the flag -dM. It'll list out all the predefined macros available on the system. For example:
$ touch dummy.hxx
$ cpp -dM ./dummy.hxx
#define __DBL_MIN_EXP__ (-1021)
#define __FLT_MIN_...
oh, and that's 1 limit for all units, whereas Starcraft 2 goes up to 6 limit per unit.
so as far as I can tell, there is no reason for Starcraft 2 to have a 200 unit limit. Nor is there a reason why they don't have movable waypoints or repeat build buttons or such things.
Just pulled it down, my eyes are so freaking tired, every time I leave the house. I have to blink 5 times until the image clears up again.
Do remember, Blizzard guys were a bunch of barely paid university scmucks who had a mortgage on their house and on top of that, managed to borrow $20,000 from their grandmother when they were starting out.
@DomagojPandža And they did a lot better of a job then than they do now.
@ScarletAmaranth No, I simply want to wait and discover what the problems are with the existing design, rather than inventing solutions to problems we might well not even have.
Global Illumination set of techniques, be it shallow-bounce radiosity or calculating ambient occlusion in screen space, that which delivers very realistic rendering instead of the basic realtime models based around local illumination.
> 1 Before any other processing takes place, each occurrence of one of the following sequences of three characters (“trigraph sequences”) is replaced by the single character indicated in Table 1.
I propose PascalCase for namespaces, types and template arguments; camelCase for variables and functions; under_scores for casting functions (like foobar_cast<>()) if we have those.
@DomagojPandža Ooh, i've just read some about "GI solver", what EXACTLY is global illumination ? Just multiple lightsources creating a final effect combined, or ?
Global Illumination is, simply put, full light propagation in a scene. In the real world, light travels at 299792458 m/s, which is blazing fast for our experience. As it ventures through the environment, it deposits part of its energy into surfaces and gets reflected onward until it reaches your eye. Indirect illumination is the key aspect of global illumination.
It hits obstacles, "bleeds color" onto nearby surfaces, reflects, refracts... And that dance is hard to simulate in realtime.
For games, we usually use a more blunt approach of using lookup textures for a lot of the data which we use in a more "local" illumination model.
Local illumination means that it doesn't give a fuck about obstacles.
And one more common sense thing we do is trace from the eye, rather particular light rays, as they might never end up affecting the final image.
@RadekSlupik Can you let me into the Kyrostat room. Seems like an interesting project that I would want to participate in.(Even if all I can do is write documentation).
@ScarletAmaranth If you have contacts and people with problems at arms length, no. If else you have a project and lots of money, no. Else, it's a lot of effort.