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-   Silent Hunter 4: Wolves of the Pacific (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/forumdisplay.php?f=202)
-   -   I miss Silent Hunter 1 (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=113039)

IsaanRanger 04-24-07 08:31 PM

Ill try to get DOS BOX but sadly some of my old DOS games dont have a internal clock, they felt technology would not advance too much. Such as Aces over the Pacific and BHawks 1942 and BOB. You would lose your ammo in 2 seconds when I tried it on a Pentium 200mmx, when it was really made for the 386. :P

I wish I could find my TF1942 disks. Id put that back on as well as Silent Service 2.

kakemann 04-24-07 08:32 PM

I never played that. It was good?

simpliciter 04-24-07 08:59 PM

SLOMO
 
There used to be a program called slomo used to slow your computer down to 386-486 levels for use with old games. Not sure if it still exists but if it does, it probably works in dos box for games that run too fast on new computers.

simpliciter 04-24-07 09:05 PM

Early War escorts
 
I'm wondering if some of the variation some of you are seeing in DD aggressiveness has anything to do with when you are in the war. At the beginning they should suck, but should start to majorly increase in effectiveness by 1943. I still haven't gotten killed by em unless I do something really stupid like get too close with time advanced, but its hard to tell if its they that suck or me that is just doing a good job avoiding them. I have been a bit puzzled why cargo ships don't speed away at top speed when i blow up a ship next to them. They do evade.. but mostly by zig zagging.. possibly they just can't go faster than 8 knots? And how realistic is it for convoys to be travelling at 2 knots? That seems to be common when I find them.

FAdmiral 04-25-07 12:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by heartc
Quote:

Originally Posted by FAdmiral
The lackluster DDs (unrealistic AI) I had in my first install
of SH4 almost turned me off but then I read other posts that had just
the opposite reaction. I tried some adjustment to the various files but just
could not get the AI to perform. So as last resort, I uninstalled game completely
and reinstalled. SURPRISE !! Now I had a game that was giving me trouble.
Pings were heard from DDs (never heard them in first install) and I was taking
damage unless I did everything smart. I had my game back....
CONCLUSION: Something didn't load right in the first install, end of line.......

JIM

I heard that several times from different members by now, so while I give that possibility some merit, it doesn't make a lot of sense at all. Either the AI skill is *so random* in game that it seems like you play a different game every other day, or it's really the installation process that is bugged as opposed to the game itself. Thing is, I've never yet heard of a bugged installation process of a game that would install different AI characteristics / logics etc. It's hard to believe.

P.S.: I also installed the game twice by now and did not see a difference in AI behaviour at all. I still get dumb DDs where I can run surfaced pretty closely in daylight (albeit in rough seas in a recent case, but visibility good, I think they should have seen me) and other times they spot my scope just like that. Have not heard pinging yet. But I'm still in 1942, so maybe there were less active-sonar equipped Jap DDs underway.

You said you have reinstalled the game twice already? Did you also delete all
files in the Registry before you reinstalled. I found that the uninstall did NOT
delete all of them in the registry. I did that manually. It might be the cause
of the lackluster AI in the game you are experiencing...

JIM

MarkShot 04-25-07 12:57 AM

I just installed SH3/SH4 on new PC. I also have SHCE and AOD running on the same system with DOSBOX.

Side note: You don't need a slowdown utility with DOSBOX, since you can arbitrarily control how many CPU cycles you allocate to your game.

I have yet to form an opinion on SH3, but certainly AOD has been my favorite subsim despite the crisper graphics in SHCE.

Now, here is the interesting thing. If you want to play SH3 totally realistic, then you need to give up the external and event camera. Doing that, you give up much of the eye candy which the game provides. The 3D crew gets old after a while as time passes by submerged. Thus, the two games are much less disimilar when played like that. You look at AOD (or SHCE for that matter) and you'll find all the major features there for a sub simulation. {A flight sim can have a wonderful 3D world and enhanced realism due to the graphics. However, a sub sim with a wonderful 3D world and realistic play are at odds with each other.}

So, for me the jury is still out on the more modern SH3/SH4. All with all come down to game play. How good is the hunt and how good is disengaging and evading the enemy? There is no reason to immediately assume that SH3/4 will be superior in this department. I have quite a few older games that blow away anything in the same category over the last few years in terms of quality game play.

The basic realities of the industry and hardware are:

(1) 10-15 years ago you could easily code very sophisticated game play with the number of CPU cycles available, but little could be done with graphics.

(2) As a result of #1, a much larger portion of projects focused on game play as opposed to art work.

(3) Increased CPU and GPU hardware often meant less time devoted on future projects to basics of game play.

(4) 2D is much simpler to code than 3D. Thus, as games went 3D, development became much more expensive and labor intensive. So, even less time was invested game play basics.

Thus, I will not be suprised to find after perhaps spending three months with SH3 that I may end up back in DOSBOX with AOD.

Torpex752 04-25-07 05:47 AM

I have never encountered dumb AI, I wonder if the realism % has anything to do with it? I play at 100%, so I'm not picking on anyone but what % are those who encounter dumb AI playing at, just for curiosity?

Frank
:cool:

jdkbph 04-25-07 10:27 AM

2D vs 3D systems interface for simulation type games
 
I totally agree with the sentiment expressed here regarding the 3D systems interface found on most "modern" vehicle type simulations.

I hate it.

No... maybe that's too strong a word.

I *despise* it (there, that's better).

The 3D cockpit interface ruined Janes' F18 for me, and I hoped that game would represent the end of a failed experiment. Not to be. The 3D systems interfaces you find in many sims these days sacrifice accuracy, detail and ease of use for eye candy. Their only practical function, as far as I can tell, is to provide 5 or 10 minutes of marketing WOW! factor.

While it is commonly argued that the 3D interface contributes to the immersion factor - and on the surface (no pun intended) it sounds like a no brainer - I find that the opposite is true. A computer mouse is no substitute for coordinated head, body and hand movement, and a computer monitor cannot provide the necessary stereoscopic depth perception. The technology to do the latter may be there someday soon (and where's my flying car? I was promised a flying car by the year 2000, dammit!), but we are prolly decades away from the former... at least in the home/entertainment market.

So to summarize my rant... 3D simulation system interfaces suck! If game developers must waste time building them for my games (in lieu of investing resources in other more important areas, such as game play and software quality assurance) at least provide an optional 2D interface we can use to actually PLAY the game once we get beyond the initial "Golly Gee" stage.

JD

stormbird 04-25-07 10:39 AM

Aces of the Deep was WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY better than the first 2 Silent Hunters. Sure they were worth a bit of a play but gimme AotD any day.

Capt.LoneRanger 04-25-07 11:14 AM

I miss SilentService :-?

ijozic 04-25-07 11:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chock
B-17 2: The Mighty Eighth (another flight sim well loved and well modded by many) also did this kind of thing and it added a personal touch to what, in simulations, can be sometimes a little clinical. IL-2 (yet another flight sim) went the opposite way, and it suffers greatly for that in my opinion, in that it's a great sim, but it has perhaps the most soul-less interface of any game ever.

I agree completely and I'd like to add Lock On as a representative of a modern sim which has the same issue.

Fer32 04-25-07 11:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mcoca
Years and years ago (gosh, I must be getting old), I was completely hooked to the original Silent Hunter. I played it for years, despite the fact that nobody ever bothered to translate the patches to the Spanish version, so I was stuck playing the retail version (1.0?).

I just loved the excitement, the way you went from hunter to prey in an instant when the first torpedo went off. I loved being chased by destroyers diving like crazy, taking my boat to the outer edges of test depth with an eye on the bathythermograph, hoping to find a thermal layer before I hit bottom or the boat was crushed.

Somehow this excitement is just missing in SH4. Yesterday I sunk my 50th merchant or so. I just snapped, and went into a group of unescorted merchants, surfaced and guns blazing. Why bother taking the stealth approach, when there is no risk? I've only been depth charged once in the entire game, and the destroyer gave up a minute after losing contact and returned to its escort station. I continued my approach and sunk a couple of ships.

You can sink tens of thousands of tons without seeing a destroyer, and when you do, it's with a convoy so large it can't really protect it. I miss those small convoys from SH1: 2-3 merchants protected by 1-2 destroyers. The fight was almost personal. Maybe not exactly realistic, but much more fun. My average SH1 career lasted two or three patrols, and generally ended when I tried to attack a task force. Now I only get killed by aircraft.

Please don't get me wrong, I enjoy SH4 a lot, even with all the small problems, or I wouldn't have spent all this time playing it. It has many small details that I missed in other subsims. I really like how you can keep requesting new orders that send you all over the Pacific. But that special touch is missing.

Does anybody else feel the same way, or am I just suffering from Grampa Simpson syndrome?

mcoca, for me the excitement only occurs the first time I play a new genre that I have not played before, for example, my very first game happened to be a flight simulator: Red Baron 3D, and I was hooked inmediately, so I started to buy a lot of the known good fligh sims out there but, I never felt the same like my first time with Red Baron, in fact, I started to feel a little boured. Then, I saw in a magazine add about a realistic FPS combat simulator, so I gave it a try. Wow, it was the great Operation Flashpoint:rock: . When I played it , I did feel fear, ansiety, joy and exciment trough the excelent campaing so, after some time, my house was full of every new FPS that arrived, but guess what, it was never the same feeling I had with OF, see the point? When we have already played lots and lots of games, most of them about the same period of time and war, its never like the first time:cry:

jmr 04-25-07 12:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MarkShot
Thus, I will not be suprised to find after perhaps spending three months with SH3 that I may end up back in DOSBOX with AOD.

It's been ages since I last played AOD but what I love most about SHIII and IV is having the ability to do manual plotting along with manually entering target parameters into the TDC. Again it's been awhile and you can correct me on this, but in AOD, EVERYTHING was done automatically for you, was it not? I recall very little player input in the whole TDC process.

heartc 04-25-07 02:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jmr
Again it's been awhile and you can correct me on this, but in AOD, EVERYTHING was done automatically for you, was it not? I recall very little player input in the whole TDC process.

You are fully correct. In AOD, there was only what we today know as "Auto-Targetting", even when playing at 100% realism.

In SHI, however, you could go *fully* manual on the TDC if you dared. And really, the TDC representation itself was more comprehensive and realistic than SHIV. Well, the *look* of the dials is more true to history in SHIV, but the *function* and dials available was more realistic in SHI. You also had a "BEARING, MARK" Button there. What was missing on the other hand was a Stadimeter, but you could get range nontheless by the increments on the periscope lines when knowing the masthead heights. So, while the *functioning* of the TDC in SHI was nothing short of perfect in terms of realism, it was hampered by the technology available back in 1996, which had the ships - while good looking - only rendered in 2D, so the AOBs of the ships you saw on screen changed ("jumped") visibly only in steps of some 15-20 degrees, which made manual targetting pretty tough. The way out of this was using the overhead "God's eye view" map, which would show angles accurately for every single degree, but at the same time provide you with, well, an unrealistic "God's eye view".

So, in the end, I think it would not have been bad to stick to the near perfect simulation of the TDC - that SHI provided - in SHIV, esecially now that we got the graphics power and technology to also use it in a realistic manner without the need to refer to a God's eye view overhead map to input proper data. You had a shortened number of dials in SHI while looking through the periscope, similar to what we have now in SHIV (still more dials though), but you *also* could raise the TDC screen alone which would fill your entire monitor showing also the other important dials all on one screen. That was some pretty good ****. Too bad we now only have this fake TDC output screen in the 3D interior instead of a usable 2D one as in SHI. Really, sometimes this rush for 3d and eye-candy is just pointless.

Still, there are only exactly two games which ever atempted to simulate the US TDC as it was on US subs in the PTO - and these games are SHI and SHIV. And in both, the main features of it are covered just about right. SHI did it better, but you could not really use it in a realistic manner cause of the gfx limitations. SHIV does the TDC itself more spartanic than SHI, but you can use it in a more realistic manner. So, in the end, I would call it a draw. ;)

Torpex752 04-25-07 04:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by heartc
Quote:

Originally Posted by jmr
Again it's been awhile and you can correct me on this, but in AOD, EVERYTHING was done automatically for you, was it not? I recall very little player input in the whole TDC process.

You are fully correct. In AOD, there was only what we today know as "Auto-Targetting", even when playing at 100% realism.

In SHI, however, you could go *fully* manual on the TDC if you dared. And really, the TDC representation itself was more comprehensive and realistic than SHIV. Well, the *look* of the dials is more true to history in SHIV, but the *function* and dials available was more realistic in SHI. You also had a "BEARING, MARK" Button there. What was missing on the other hand was a Stadimeter, but you could get range nontheless by the increments on the periscope lines when knowing the masthead heights. So, while the *functioning* of the TDC in SHI was nothing short of perfect in terms of realism, it was hampered by the technology available back in 1996, which had the ships - while good looking - only rendered in 2D, so the AOBs of the ships you saw on screen changed ("jumped") visibly only in steps of some 15-20 degrees, which made manual targetting pretty tough. The way out of this was using the overhead "God's eye view" map, which would show angles accurately for every single degree, but at the same time provide you with, well, an unrealistic "God's eye view".

So, in the end, I think it would not have been bad to stick to the near perfect simulation of the TDC - that SHI provided - in SHIV, esecially now that we got the graphics power and technology to also use it in a realistic manner without the need to refer to a God's eye view overhead map to input proper data. You had a shortened number of dials in SHI while looking through the periscope, similar to what we have now in SHIV (still more dials though), but you *also* could raise the TDC screen alone which would fill your entire monitor showing also the other important dials all on one screen. That was some pretty good ****. Too bad we now only have this fake TDC output screen in the 3D interior instead of a usable 2D one as in SHI. Really, sometimes this rush for 3d and eye-candy is just pointless.

Still, there are only exactly two games which ever atempted to simulate the US TDC as it was on US subs in the PTO - and these games are SHI and SHIV. And in both, the main features of it are covered just about right. SHI did it better, but you could not really use it in a realistic manner cause of the gfx limitations. SHIV does the TDC itself more spartanic than SHI, but you can use it in a more realistic manner. So, in the end, I would call it a draw. ;)

You are correct about the TDC vs grafics in SH1! I can honestly say that that TDC was/is the best TDC to date.

Frank
:cool:

Hartmann 04-25-07 04:34 PM

http://img113.imageshack.us/img113/2644/sh020lk3.jpg


http://img360.imageshack.us/img360/8291/sh022yb5.jpg

http://img360.imageshack.us/img360/8082/sh024hh2.jpg

Sailor Steve 04-25-07 04:49 PM

One of the things I do like about SH3 (and I presume SH4 is the same) is the ability to have realistic maps, in the sense of not seeing everything that's within range every time the periscope is up. I'm a huge fan of the 'Assisted Plotting Mod' for SH3, and hope to see one like it in SH4 soon.

On the other hand, Hartmann, those screens do bring out the nostalgia.

jhelix70 04-25-07 04:51 PM

Those pics made me nostalgic :oops:

I miss the radar dispay. Clear, 2D panels and the radar actually worked properly.

melin71 04-25-07 04:58 PM

Im too played silent hunter 1, silen service, and something many seems not remeber at all. a game called up periscope. i remember that game, to be very great. but that is VERY old game, i played that on my comandor 64 back in -84 or something like that. but very strange..i never play AOD...what i remember.

I too miss more interaktiv with the sub. and I allmost feel trapped. you got only 3 postioen in the sub. commander room, brighde, and tower. problem with this..less interaktiv are that you can play the game only with use of your map and periscope. you NEVER need too be in commander room or brige. becrouse..what shall you do there??.

But if you had to interaktiv with statioen and stuff in commander room. then we talking. if you had to walk to radio station for get latest message, and so on. if you want to see the map. you walk to the map tabel. that had greated a more interaktiv sub, you wants to bridge..you climb up for the ladder. no fast buttons to get to station. i think this should make at least me more the..im there feeling. problem with this...I guess....I will never see a game that will put me REALLY in a sub..i should not be surprised if we only get the bridge next version. maby if some other company starts to make sub games...maby.

Chock 04-25-07 05:27 PM

I'm fully in agreement with probably most people who have messed around with computer games and simulations for years, in that there was perhaps more 'love' put into the gameplay in older games. I do believe that if 3D environments for the interior of a submarine are going to be added to a game, then they ought to have some functionality over and above mere eye candy.

Oddly enough, flight simulator developers have been slow to do this too, despite the more apparent requirement for it to add to immersion and the fact that flight sims tend to 'push the envelope' in terms of 3D graphics advances. In its current state, it is possible to 'walk' around the interior of your Boeing 747 in MS Flight Simulator, but without any passengers on board (although this is starting to happen) or any real reason to do it, it merely becomes wow factor eye candy.

One innovation that is good in this respect however, is Track IR, which does help tremendously with flight sims, and not just combat ones either. It is truly something to behold in the brilliant gliding simulator 'Condor'. A genuine advance not just for the sake of 'because we can do it'.

Those who were in at the start of SH multiplayer implementation will doubtless remember the shaky multiplayer performance that went with it, which was particularly annoying to behold when you'd spent a couple of hours setting up for an attack with a buddy, only to have your session bomb out. SH4 is massively more stable in this respect and so there is one advance that earlier subsims cannot match, given that most of them didn't even have the option. Although again it lags behind flight sims in that the current MS FS will allow you to link up online and have your friend as the co-pilot alongside you, which is great fun by the way. There were promises that this was going to happen in Microprose's B-17 2 some years ago, but sadly that never happened, nevertheless several current combat flight sims will let two or more people be in the same aircraft, and this seems to be something of a required feature of them these days. so it's not hard to see that future renditions of SH might allow you to be the XO or TDC operator on a sub while your buddy is the skipper - I bet that will lead to some Run Silent, Run Deep-style disagreements!

Back in the realms of submarine simulations and what might make them more involved so that they are a genuine advance on those of yesteryear, I should like to see more involvment with the crew (in either 2D or 3D). Having someone panic because of shell shock 'Johann style' or dealing with insubordination are just two ideas that might be fun. As would having your simulated XO make a tactical suggestion to you. Offering you a couple of choices in matters would also be nice to see, such as: 'Do you want to cannibalise the radar set to get your radio working?', or whatever.

There is still plenty of scope for sub sims to improve, that's for sure.


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