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Would it be possible to include a poly counter?

azonicrider2nd

New member
On another popular game forum(Sega-16), me and my fellow forum members are discussing the capabilities of the Dreamcast vs the PS2.

But the problem often arises that there are no Dreamcast emulators that have a poly counter.

What is a poly counter? its a statistic that states the number of polygons on-screen at any given time.

This old PS2 emulator has a poly counter(where it states 19843 polygons):
KIIFOYh.png


Would this be possible to include in Demul? thanks for your time.
 

MetalliC

Demul developer
can't say I like this idea, because 99.9% users don't need this.
there is exists a number of open source dreamcast emulators, why not add vertex counter in one of them ? this would be easy task for person who have even "junior" coding skills.

add: if you need information about few specific games - I can provide it.
btw with S-16 topic you was referring to ?
 
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azonicrider2nd

New member
can't say I like this idea, because 99.9% users don't need this.

Its more than fine if its not included in the main build. Like maybe a plugin that has to be manually installed into the emulator

there is exists a number of open source dreamcast emulators, why not add vertex counter in one of them ? this would be easy task for person who have even "junior" coding skills.
I don't know if Chankast is open source, but I couldn't get it to work with a single game. A lot of these abandoned emulators have very low game compatibility


add: if you need information about few specific games - I can provide it.

We are discussing the most graphically impressive Dreamcast games, such as:

-Dead or Alive 2
-Ferrari F355 Challenge
-Tokyo Extreme Racer 2
-Test Drive Le Mans
-Metropolis Street Racer
-Shenmue II

btw with S-16 topic you was referring to ?
I tried including it in my original post, but it said my first post can't contain too many URLs.

www.sega-16.com/forum/showthread.php?26634-PS2-vs-Dreamcast-Graphics&p=804631

Also please don't go to the beginning of the thread, as I made a lot of ignorant/immature posts :blush:
 

MetalliC

Demul developer
DoA2 25000 - 35000 (@60fps), most (if not only) really optimized DC game I'd say.
F355 7000 - 16000, usually about 12000 (@60fps)
Shenmue II during game about 10000 - 15000, in some scenes up to 25000 (@30fps)
Le Mans during track 8000 - 9000, ~25000 at start then all opponent cars and tribunes visible (@30fps)

speaking in general - DC's GPU may render way more polygons, and it may look way better if vertex colors had applied nice lighting, but DC CPU was too weak to transform significant amounts of geometry and calculate good lighting effects.

PS: note - numbers is vertex counts, it is some less than actual triangle polygons count.
 
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azonicrider2nd

New member
Appreciate the information. Yea I've heard thats exactly the reason why so many Dreamcast games have poor lighting and shadows, because it has to be processed by the Hitachi SH4, which is already busy doing geometry calculations and physics. The PS2 doesn't suffer from this as much because it has co-processors(Vector Unit 0 & 1).
 

MetalliC

Demul developer
IMHO the actual reasons was:
- games was looking cool enough for its time (1999 - 2000), and customers was like "shut up and take my money" already. so, from developer/publisher perspective, there was no reason to waste time and resources = money and make games better (like making high-polygon models and higher resolution textures).
- developers was not really interested in learn & use Dreamcast hardware specific/exclusive features. instead they use mostly feature set they familiar with, and in the way, how they used to use it for other hardware platforms. (this is not assumption, but fact based on information from Sega staff and former game developers)

so, the reasons mostly not technical, but more like lack of developers motivation to make games which pushes Dreamcast hardware up to its limits.
even if Dreamcast was weaker compared to PS2, there very few games really uses its full raw power (like DoA2), and none of games uses all "non common / exclusive" hardware features.
 
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