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-   -   Immersion, Immersion, Immersion (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=160147)

Tarnsman 01-18-10 11:44 PM

I want sharks with freakin laserbeams on their heads!
Oh wrong movie.

Crew interaction is the key to immersion for me. 688i was immersive as heck and it didnt have any animated crew. But the voices sounded so real and responded so smartly, I felt I was there. SH3 fell down on that one because they didnt model enough voices -- why cant have a voice for every text message, I dont know. Sh4 is even more mute.

When I give an order I want to hear a response echoed down the boat. Subsimming is mostly about sound and I think the visual stuff has been allowed to overtake the audio. As much as I like the 3d crew I hope -- but I doubt-- that they will have much more to say.

Sailor Steve 01-19-10 12:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Randomizer (Post 1239536)
This is exactly why no game can ever make everyone happy. I am at the opposite end of the spectrum where computer a generated human element destroys immersion rather than creating it. Far better (for me at any rate) to imagine crew interaction rather than doing so via via a CGI drone interacting through some drop-down menu worthy of an M$ EXCEL spreadsheet.

Too each his/her own, all opinions carry the same weight in the big scheme of things.

Back when I played Silent Hunter 1 regularly, I enjoyed the lifeguard missions. The pilot in his raft looked like a little weeble or lego guy, but once he was on board I would spend the rest of the patrol giving him a tour of the boat and showing him life from the 'underside'. Now with SH4 we have lovely animated planes going down and pilots in parachutes, but once they are onboard do they appear with the crew? Do they have a name. No, I'm not asking for those things, merely pointing out that it's a lot prettier, but you still have to imagine some of it.

@ Ducimus: I agree completely (I think - I may have misunderstood you). Every time someone complains about the sea floor not being realistic, or the propellors, I always come back to "But the external view isn't realistic in and of itself!"

People seem to want the trivial stuff to be perfect, while not caring if the thing works right or not.

Ships-R-Us 01-19-10 02:29 AM

I'm the one that posted the thread a while back about the props. Believe me if anyone read it rather than gloss over things with glazed eyes as most do they would realize I was simply analyzing how different modders dealt with certain aspects. I analyze lots of things, and it was a way to pass the time constructively......

Sailor Steve 01-19-10 07:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ships-R-Us (Post 1239735)
I'm the one that posted the thread a while back about the props. Believe me if anyone read it rather than gloss over things with glazed eyes as most do they would realize I was simply analyzing how different modders dealt with certain aspects. I analyze lots of things, and it was a way to pass the time constructively......

Not to worry, Ships, this prop thing has been going on for years. Some point it out, some try to fix it and some squeal like it's the most important thing since subsims began. It all depends on which you are.

Iron Budokan 01-20-10 12:55 PM

SH3 rocked because of its immersive qualities and replayability. :up:

JScones 01-20-10 05:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Iron Budokan (Post 1241029)
SH3 rocked because of its immersive qualities and replayability. :up:

And I'm guessing it's gonna continue to rock for some players for some time to come... ;)

Jimbuna 01-20-10 05:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JScones (Post 1241310)
And I'm guessing it's gonna continue to rock for some players for some time to come... ;)

I sure hope so...I've no plans to take it off my system http://www.psionguild.org/forums/ima...ies/pirate.gif

don1reed 01-21-10 08:40 AM

Simulation. Immersion. Game-Play.
All excellent responses--pro and con. As I approach my septuagenarian years and think back over years to some of the military schools I’ve attended, as many of you have; we’ve a pretty good idea of what “simulation” is and means.

The difference between a board-game and a simulation, from my pov, is imagination. With a board-game, after a successful roll of the die, a player must imagine a torpedo running and hitting a target. With a computer sim, a player can see the animation actually accomplish the mission due to the result of good tactics, seamanship, planning and execution, all simulated, of course.

The ultimate “Immersion”, I suppose, would be to feel a brief spike of joyous pride for having hit what you were aiming at, followed by a twinge of guilt having just killed defenseless merchant sailors by sinking their unarmed ship.

Uber Gruber 01-21-10 09:11 AM

I'm not keen on Immersion....they cost a fortune to run. I use a gas boiler now on a timer....much mor efficient, and I don't have to get out of bed to switch it on before taking a shower.

Thanks UBI!:salute:

johan_d 01-21-10 05:20 PM

As a casual player, Sh3 wGWX gives me a lot of immersion, but not enough.
Something is missing, and like a flightsim guy I am, I miss the finer controls, actions and communication(!) with the rest of 'us'.
Dangerous Waters is a lot of gameplay, but its to much for one guy, like a PMDG747 at VATSIM on your own, or better an INS equipped 742 at VATSIM.
Almost unable to do alone..
Now on SH3 I dont do manual targetting, I think this is for your crew to figure out. Immersion is in the decision making, what lacks a lot in SH3, since you are on a random encounter course.
Immersion = interraction, not in graphics, nor in the TDC.
Altough graphics helps a lot, for example somehow the modern game graphics, like Sh4 look cartoonish. For me it is.
Same with FS9 vs FSX, something is cartoonish, and it aint FS9.

Just look carefull at pictures of recent games, COD:MW2 for example. Looks good, like Asassins Greed 2, but there is something in the screen filtering that looks wrong. I cant pinpoint it, maybe compare some other games. Original Flashpoint was immersive, maybe due the bad graphics, and the need for imagination (immersion) versus Arma2. Same story, somewhere all those high FSAA games loose something, and then I didnt touch the attention span most games got!

Now for Sh5, I think immersion comes with at least more interraction with BdU, we need orders, goals and missions, more captain decisions, meaning more boat control actions, like ways to safe fuel, and human like enemy counter actions.. luck factors, tiredness, time of day etc.

end of rants.. :stare:

THE_MASK 01-21-10 05:41 PM

Immersion: for me i achieved a diffrent level of immersion when playing SH3 after i turned all cameras off . Whoa , how do i see ships now , oh yeah i have to go to periscope depth and use the periscope etc . It just felt diffrent and i was more nervous etc . The devs can give diffrent levels of immersion by using diffrent technics . I said i would like the screen to have water on it to simulate water in your eyes . What this does however is give the immersion of really raining and the benefit of realism by reducing vision when it rains . The devs can use in game things to create immersion .

Platapus 01-21-10 07:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tarnsman (Post 1239685)
I want sharks with freakin laserbeams on their heads!


Ubi will probably give us mutated Sea Bass. But they they promise that they will be ill tempered:yep:

IanC 01-22-10 05:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by don1reed (Post 1241964)
Simulation. Immersion. Game-Play.
All excellent responses--pro and con. As I approach my septuagenarian years and think back over years to some of the military schools I’ve attended, as many of you have; we’ve a pretty good idea of what “simulation” is and means.

The difference between a board-game and a simulation, from my pov, is imagination. With a board-game, after a successful roll of the die, a player must imagine a torpedo running and hitting a target. With a computer sim, a player can see the animation actually accomplish the mission due to the result of good tactics, seamanship, planning and execution, all simulated, of course.

The ultimate “Immersion”, I suppose, would be to feel a brief spike of joyous pride for having hit what you were aiming at, followed by a twinge of guilt having just killed defenseless merchant sailors by sinking their unarmed ship.

Anybody interested in this subject, there's a great book called War Games by Thomas B. Allen. It's a little dated (around 1987) but a good read about simulations and war gaming.
For example he lists the spectrum of war gaming for realism starting with the most realistic; Military field exercises- Military field experiments- Map exercises- War games- Computer simulations- Analytical models.
The list is reversed for Convenience and Accessibility and Degree of Abstraction.

don1reed 01-22-10 09:33 AM

Tnx IanC, I'll check it out. :salute:

edit: found a used copy for $0.01 @ Amazon.

cheers,

IanC 01-23-10 02:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by don1reed (Post 1243151)
Tnx IanC, I'll check it out. :salute:

edit: found a used copy for $0.01 @ Amazon.

cheers,

:o :up:


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