Jump to content

ModZero

Members
  • Posts

    545
  • Joined

Posts posted by ModZero

  1. I really wish they just went with naming after function, it gives plenty of freedom in a setting where planets are made out of neutronium. So we'd have "liquid fuel," "cryo fuel," "oxidiser," "solid fuel," "monopropellant" and, last but not least, "fusion kibble."

    I mean, people would still split hair over "what fusion kibble actually is," but it sets expectations better.

  2. 3 hours ago, Brikoleur said:

    I think it'd be really cool if rings really were hazardous. Obviously they can't model every rock in them, but they could magic some in if you get close.

    I mean, while my preference is for rings to generally be "mist that hurts a lot if you enter it at wrong velocity" with relatively sparse larger objects, but with a bit of mathematical trickery you can ensure effectively infinite supply of objects, as long as you don't need to keep any data on them permanently. That's exactly what Elite does, and people actually map the rings. I'd actually love this for sparse-but-enormous asteroid belts, though I suspect the mix of "the asteroids don't exist until you start looking" and having a usable planning UI would be treacherous.

  3. 21 minutes ago, Xd the great said:

    Maybe dust, but definitely not rocks. It will be too hard to avoid high speed crashing.

    Isn't Lua usually ran sandboxed? If so, then I don't really see much difference from any other complex file format.

  4. Just now, M_Rat13 said:

    The little green men seems more like a dad joke. I'll grant you, it doesn't take itself too seriously, but that doesn't mean adults can't be silly too, in fact, we need that more than anyone else.

    Can be silly, that's why so many of us enjoy kids stuff. Problems start when we try to own it, like with the entire "She-Ra isn't sexy enough" debacle, or, well, this thread.

  5. 12 minutes ago, M_Rat13 said:

    KSP 2 is for us older folk, and that isn't going to change any time soon.

    It's literally designed for kids, and maaaybe folks who enjoy kid stuff with a bit more "edge." It has little green men in it. The overly serious people spend their days complaining about the correct amount of resources in a life support mod instead of playing the game. 

    And it has multiplayer now. In 2010s, a game without it would have very limited appeal to most kids. Most people even. But with co-op and base-building it has a really decent chance. And yes, it's challenging, but kids don't just play easy games. 9 year old is probably the lower boundary, but do expect plenty of early teens telling you to git gud on the forums.

  6. Rockets are noodly, though. Not super noodly, and KSPs joints are a poor approximation visually, but rigidity sets limits on rocket proportions. Most "real" giant spaceship designs go for pushing a spindly long ship because the forces involved are often comically low.

    And it's not just rockets that are noodly. Have this fun example. I also remember staying at a radar tower my father worked in, near the sea during a storm. That was concrete bending, thank $deity I don't have motion sickness.

  7. 3 hours ago, DunaManiac said:

    I am not sure a 9 year old would be interested in KSP2 as it being a space game

    ...it's more of a game for 9 year olds than a game for adults complaining about 9 year olds, and if kids struggle too much then it means one of the main goals of the sequel — approachability — wasn't achieved. I mean, it's more for for like 14 year olds, but I suspect you were exaggerating anyway.

    And yeah, plenty of kids are into space stuff.

     

  8. 17 minutes ago, Brikoleur said:

    Such as....?

    Low ambiguity, tooling, solid serializers and code generators available without it being a binary format. Established (if horrible) schema format and namespacing. It has plenty of bad properties, but general-purpose serialization formats are all horrible once you scratch the surface.

    JSON looks nice, but lacks comments, is in many places poorly defined, and it has number format inherited from JS, which can bite you hard if you handle large numbers - thankfully it's only really a problem if you handle really big number, but unless you're describing solar systems or something you're unlikely to hit it. YAML is an attempt to make JSON better, but between the references and the fact that it's actually a superset of JSON it's actually tricky to implement well, and enables horrifying structures (I'd know, I worked with Ansible, though that includes _templated_ YAML).

    I'm kind-of partial to HCL, but honestly, nowadays I've become one of those horrible people who think that you should just embed a Python or Ruby interpreter and expose a configuration interface in that language. Ruby has the benefit of enabling really nice DSLs, and if your users want to use JSON or whatever they can just use import the files themselves.

  9. 1 hour ago, DStaal said:

    Some of these - Life Support in particular - I want to say 'leave it to the mods'.

    I'd say leave a lot of things to the mods. To me, KSP is a platform, so while certain things are unpractical to leave to mods (say, core flight physics), beyond that what I care about is "how well mods can do UI," "how much you can do with just the config files" (with all due respect to Kopernicus, Kopernicus shouldn't be necessary :D), maybe frameworks that establish conventions improving interoperability between mods.

  10. Quote

    Falls du die mods zum Thema Lebenserhaltungssysteme ausprobiert hast; so etwas detailliertes wird es nicht geben, aber wie gesagt ich kann nicht allzu viel dazu sagen denn es gibt da ein paar geheimnisse.

    Ugh, that feels like something that will just get in the way of what I'd prefer. And if other systems and/or mods use this, then the ability to turn it off might not really help all that much if I want life support, just different. But we'll see.

  11. 5 minutes ago, Geschosskopf said:

    Well, there's Orbiter for that.  Go live out your real-ish fantasies there.  Don't force your preferences on everybody else who would rather do things differently.  

    ...irony is strong with that one.

    5 minutes ago, Geschosskopf said:

    Seriously, the main thing I object to is folks thinking THEIR way of playing is THE ONE TRUE GOD

    ...quite extremely strong. Godly, one would say.

    13 minutes ago, Geschosskopf said:

    So I shall continue...

    ...but why?

    And it escalates. Seriously, you're currently getting really upset that some people enjoy something, and a thing might not be for you. You know, I have a sandwich, and it's also not for you.

    7 minutes ago, Geschosskopf said:

    So basically, THE MOST that any so-called "realism" feature can do is punish those who'd rather just have fun and not be bothered and those who,  for whatever reason, lack the intellectual capacity to foresee such problems and get kicked in the face by them repeatedly.

    That is... dismissive, patronising, and incredibly offensive. You seem to be trying to refer to accessibility features in games, which are good, but you don't actually care about what & why of such features, so you end up like so many people using social justice language without care for its actual content: saying things like "lack the intellectual capacity." Stay in your lane and don't pretend this isn't about you. Because you might just be talking over the people you just pretended to care about.

    16 minutes ago, Geschosskopf said:

    Then you've never thought it through.  Try again.

    ...also, pretending that you care about disability and then insulting other people's intellectual ability is really extremely ironic.

  12. 7 minutes ago, SpaceFace545 said:

    That what I meant by faint stars, I just chose the picture cause it looked the nicest out of all of them

    When not looking at a planet or a sun or something, the stars are way brighter in space. And they don't blink. Figure's you'd be able to see the milky way better, I mean, you just need to get out of town once (I recommend it) to see it, and no, the atmosphere is not an amplifier.

    As a corollary, so many "experts" are here in this sub forum. Any moment now someone's going to demand a scientifically accurate flat Kerbin, hail Sobek.

×
×
  • Create New...