[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: 'not an artist' article
Chris Purnell wrote:
> I liked your idea about evolving the bones. I think fixing the number of
> bones and their conections is the way to go. And having the genes control
> the length of the bones. I'm not sure about constraints about the relative
> lengths of the upper and lower parts of the limbs.
>
> This is where I get stuck. Putting the flesh on the bones.
Don't get me wrong - I wasn't thinking about physical bones - and then some
realistic computation of musculature and skin...NO NO NO!
I mean't the software structures that animators use with matrix weighting
and such to animate characters. There would be 'bones' in the characters
hair, clothing, weapons, etc.
> > It's tempting (for example) to think of 'symmetry' genes - but does that
> > overly-restrict or pre-judge the nature of the things you build?
>
> I was thinking of enforcing left-right symmetry so we only have to
> generate half a character.
Well, I'd like to be able to generate characters like the hunchback
of Notre Dame from the Disney cartoon.
He is pretty asymmetrical - geometrically...but symmetrical topologically
(if you see what I mean).
I was thinking about maybe having one gene specify the order of
symmetry (8 for an octopus, 5 for a starfish) - a gene to specify
mirror symmetry - and a gene to control the amount of variation
between two limits for the otherwise nominally symmetrical object.
Dunno though - the more I think about this, the harder it gets.
I think it will be necessary to start simple and add complexity
once some experience has been had with such a system.
If we had one that worked, it would be really simple to do
Pokemon-like games with 150 cartoon characters. That would
be inconcievable for an opensource project without such a tool.
(BTW: My son tells me that the next Pokemon cartridge for the
GameBoy will allow you to cross-breed your Pokemon to get entirely
new creatures. That says they must already be thinking along these
lines).
--
Steve Baker HomeEmail: <sjbaker1@airmail.net>
WorkEmail: <sjbaker@link.com>
HomePage : http://web2.airmail.net/sjbaker1
Projects : http://plib.sourceforge.net
http://tuxaqfh.sourceforge.net
http://tuxkart.sourceforge.net
http://prettypoly.sourceforge.net
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: linuxgames-unsubscribe@sunsite.auc.dk
For additional commands, e-mail: linuxgames-help@sunsite.auc.dk