Difference between revisions of "GAM670/DPS905 Project Requirements 20121"
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Latest revision as of 05:34, 11 March 2013
GAM670/DPS905 | Weekly Schedule | Student List | Project Requirements | Teams and their Projects | Student Resources
Contents
Due Dates
Proposed game and team members selected | January 12 |
Proposal completed and projects selected | January 21 |
Project progress reports | February 15 |
Project completed - Class Presentation | March 21 |
Game completed - Class Presentation | April 11-13 |
Research Project
Your research project involves the investigation and implementation of a specific feature in the update base code. Identifying the features and the required refinements will demand some initial research on your part. The project is in two phases.
Phase 1
The first phase is an informal, written proposal of the features that your team has decided to implement in its final game. Your description should identify the basic aspects of these features as well as the refinements to those features that are needed to implement in your own game by the end of the semester.
Your proposal should be presented on the team project page of the course wiki under Proposal. Your proposal should identify the parts of the framework that you expect to modify extensively in your implementation. Your proposal should be on the wiki before your first meeting with your instructor. You should update your proposal after this meeting. Your instructor will use your updated proposal as the reference for marking this assignment.
The base code for this course is an updated version of the base code for the previous course. You should use the updated base code to develop the feature that you have selected and present the results of your work using the updated base code. The updated base code with the new features installed will serve as the source for other teams' access.
Each team member should have their own successfully compiled version of the updated base code in their own workspace in the branch sub-directory of their team's repository.
The source code for each team member's copy of the base code should include the following updates:
- add your own name to the caption for the dialog box
- change the window title to include the name of the team
Merge all of the team members' workspaces back to trunk so that the caption of the dialog box shows all of the names of the team members. See Merging your work back to trunk for details.
The purpose of this first phase of the project is twofold:
- to identify the features that your final game will include
- to identify the features that each member of your team will incorporate
- to identify the features that your team is expecting to incorporate from the research projects of other teams.
Phase 2
The second phase releases the updated base code with your new features to the class.
This phase concludes with a presentation that shows
- how your new features work within the updated base code
- how to incorporate the new features in external code
You will have one hour to make your presentation and to describe the feature that you have implemented.
Appointment Schedules
Research Project
Name | Date and Time |
Clinton Bale | Tuesday January 15 11:40AM |
Jesse Santos | Tuesday January 15 12:00AM |
sezar gantous | Friday January 18 11:40AM |
Dylan Segna | Friday January 18 12:00AM |
Feature Progress Meeting
Name | Date and Time |
Sezar Gantous | Monday March 11 12:00 AM |
Jesse Santos | Friday March 15 11:30 AM |
Clinton Bale | Friday March 15 12:00 AM |
Project Presentation Schedule
Team Name | Date and Time |
Wednesday March 22 8:00AM | |
Wednesday March 21 8:25AM | |
Wednesday March 21 8:50AM | |
Wednesday March 21 9:15AM | |
Friday March 23 8:00AM | |
Friday March 23 8:25AM | |
Friday March 23 8:50AM | |
Friday March 23 9:15AM | |
C Minor | Wednesday March 28 8:00AM |
WIN - Randl(Terrain Generation)/Jeremy(Networked Gameplay) | Friday March 30 8:00AM |
Features that you could add to the Updated Base Code
The base code serves as the common thread for sharing feature development amongst all members of the class. Our objective is to add features that students wish to see implemented in their own games. We review this list at the start of the semester and you are welcome to expand detail or to add other features.
- visibility determination
- viewing frustum
- bounding volume construction
- principal component analysis
- covariance matrix
- bounding box construction
- bounding sphere construction
- bounding ellipsoid construction
- principal component analysis
- bounding volume tests
- bounding sphere test
- bounding ellipsoid test
- bounding cylinder test
- bounding box test
- spatial partitioning
- octrees
- BSP trees
- portal systems
- portal clipping
- reduced view frustums
- collision detection
- plane collisions
- sphere and plane
- box and plane
- spatial partitioning
- general sphere collisions
- oriented bounding boxes
- sliding
- collisions with physics
- moving spheres
- moving boxes
- plane collisions
- lighting techniques
- isotropic
- Cook-Torrance
- Oren-Nayar
- anisotropic
- Ward
- Ashikhmin-Shirley
- bump mapping
- parallax
- self-shadowing
- environment cube maps
- cube mapping
- high dynamic range cube maps
- high dynamic range lighting
- simple
- faked
- tone mapping
- isotropic
- texturing techniques
- projective texturing
- vertex texturing
- displacement mapping
- geometry images
- audio techniques
- comprehensive collada imports
- camera techniques
- third-person camera
- quaternions
- networked gameplay
- noise
- fluids
- non-photo-realistic rendering
- particle systems
- terrain
- terrain following
- opengl 3.0
- open audio
- Direct3D10
- porting the framework to DirectX10
- Direct3D11
- porting the framework to DirectX11
- Direct2D
- advanced force feedback
- input techniques
- XInput
- Raw input
- picking
- optimize coordinators for design unit creation and destruction
- introduce standard template library
- 0(1) removal of objects
- provide external access to all objects in the scene coordinator
- enable Streaming SIMD Extension 2 in Configuration Properties with optimized math calculations
Game
Requirements
Your game involves a real-time audio-visual-haptic experience in a 3-D world using advanced game programming techniques to improve the performance and the appeal of your game. The user should experience force feedback through some form of controller in response to certain common actions in your game.
Each member must contribute their own feature to the game development in a selected area of specialization. Each member should also contribute to the integration of a separate, unrelated feature developed by another team.
In developing your game, you may start with the code that you used in the previous course or you may start with the updated base code for this course.
You present your completed game with your team's new features and two new features that members of other teams developed. Your presentation includes
- a demonstration of how the game plays
- an explanation of the innovative aspects that your team members have implemented
- an evaluation of the features that your team incorporated, including criticisms and suggested enhancements
Each team has 30 minutes to showcase its game.
Game Presentation Schedule
Team Name | Date and Time |
Wednesday April 11 8:20AM | |
Wednesday April 11 8:50AM | |
Wednesday April 11 9:20AM | |
Friday April 13 8:20AM | |
Friday April 13 8:50AM | |
C Minor | Friday April 13 9:20AM |