Free Radical co-founder Dave Doak talks next-gen development
Back in the day, abundant bloom was the coolest thing in the block. Now that developers have access to more powerful hardware, some gamers will call them lazy if a next-gen title doesn’t have parallax mapping, high resolution rendering, and all that. Free Radical co-founder Dave Doak, however, would rather be creative than make generic eye-candy.
“A typical next-gen look has often got all the next-gen stuff like specular highlights and normal mapping turned up to the max… But if it’s not turned up to 11, people think it’s not next-gen enough,” he said in a recent interview with PC Gamer in its issue # 180. Yet, the TimeSplitters series took a more cartoony approach over super-realistic graphics, and Doak seems to favor that style.
Even with powerful tools around, it looks like TimeSplitters will stay true to its roots. After giving Valve’s Team Fortress 2 props for standing out, noting how developers are starting to ponder if they really have to do realistic rendering or go for a distinct look, he said:
TimeSplitters has always had that [distinct look] and it’s something we want to go back and look at again, specifically taking that cartoon look and doing it with the interesting rendering you can do now [with next-gen].
We haven’t heard much about TimeSplitters 4, but if Doak’s words hold true, then we’re getting more of the quirky first-person shooter that offered hours of fun. Who cares about complex physics engines and extremely detailed character models? Give us rocket launcher-wielding monkeys and we’re sold.
Back in the day, abundant bloom was the coolest thing in the block. Now that developers have access to more powerful hardware, some gamers will call them lazy if a next-gen title doesn’t have parallax mapping, high resolution rendering, and all that. Free Radical co-founder Dave Doak, however, would rather be creative than make generic eye-candy.
“A typical next-gen look has often got all the next-gen stuff like specular highlights and normal mapping turned up to the max… But if it’s not turned up to 11, people think it’s not next-gen enough,” he said in a recent interview with PC Gamer in its issue # 180. Yet, the TimeSplitters series took a more cartoony approach over super-realistic graphics, and Doak seems to favor that style.
Even with powerful tools around, it looks like TimeSplitters will stay true to its roots. After giving Valve’s Team Fortress 2 props for standing out, noting how developers are starting to ponder if they really have to do realistic rendering or go for a distinct look, he said:
TimeSplitters has always had that [distinct look] and it’s something we want to go back and look at again, specifically taking that cartoon look and doing it with the interesting rendering you can do now [with next-gen].
We haven’t heard much about TimeSplitters 4, but if Doak’s words hold true, then we’re getting more of the quirky first-person shooter that offered hours of fun. Who cares about complex physics engines and extremely detailed character models? Give us rocket launcher-wielding monkeys and we’re sold.