Removes a leftover case for falling to back to generic-merc in jak 1.
This should fix the bug where daxter's face wasn't animated in the intro
after floating-point blerc was added.
```lisp
(defenum collide-action
:type uint32
:bitfield #t
(solid 0) ;; used for solid things
(rider-plat-sticky 1) ;; used for platforms in rider/platform interactions
(rider-target 2) ;; used for target in rider/platform interactions
(edgegrab-active 3) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting edgegrab states
(rider-plat 4) ;; used for platforms in rider/platform interactions
(unused 5) ;; totally unused?
(edgegrab-possible 6) ;; used when edge grab checks should be done
(edgegrab-cam 7) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting edgegrab states
(swingpole-active 8) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting swingpole states
(racer 9) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting racer states
(attackable 10) ;; used for something to do with attacking/damaging
(attackable-unused 11) ;; seems to relate to attacking - set in several places but never tested for?
(snowball 12) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting snowball states
(tube 13) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting tube states
(flut 14) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting flutflut states
(racer-grounded 15) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting certain racer states w/ extra conditions
(racer-unused 16) ;; seems to relate to racer - never set, only cleared in one place?
)
```
This moves the blerc math from mips2c to the Merc2 renderer, and uses
floats instead.
We could potentially do this on the GPU, which would be even faster, but
this isn't that slow in the first place.
Adds support for adding custom subtitles to Jak 2 audio. Comes with a
new editor for the new system and format. Compared to the Jak 1 system,
this is much simpler to make an editor for.
Comes with a few subtitles already made as an example.
Cutscenes are not officially supported but you can technically subtitle
those with editor, so please don't right now.
This new system supports multiple subtitles playing at once (even from a
single source!) and will smartly push the subtitles up if there's a
message already playing:
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/7569514/033e6374-a05a-4c31-b029-51868153a932)
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/7569514/5298aa6d-a183-446e-bdb6-61c4682df917)
Unlike in Jak 1, it will not hide the bottom HUD when subtitles are
active:
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/7569514/d466bfc0-55d0-4689-a6e1-b7784b9fff59)
Sadly this leaves us with not much space for the subtitle region (and
the subtitles are shrunk when the minimap is enabled) but when you have
guards and citizens talking all the time, hiding the HUD every time
anyone spoke would get really frustrating.
The subtitle speaker is also color-coded now, because I thought that
would be fun to do.
TODO:
- [x] proper cutscene support.
- [x] merge mode for cutscenes so we don't have to rewrite the script?
---------
Co-authored-by: Hat Kid <6624576+Hat-Kid@users.noreply.github.com>
Gives proper names to almost every color. It is very apparent that some
colors are context-sensitive/made for a specific purpose, so those
colors were named after that purpose instead of a generic color name.
Updates the decompiler for the new format and there's new macros. This
new format should be easier to read/parse.
Also rewrote `sp-init-fields!` (both jak 1 and 2) from assembly to GOAL.
Hopefully I did not miss any regressions in Jak 1/2 while updating the
files, it's a lot.
Cleans up every `dummy-*` and `TODO-RENAME-*` method up with either
proper names or by renaming them to `[type-name]-method-[method-id]`
similar to Jak 2's `all-types`.
Also fixes the bad format string in `collide-cache` and adds the event
handler hack to Jak 1.
The game boots and runs fine, but I might have missed a PAL patch or
other manual patches here and there, please double-check if possible.
- better handling of the `disable-fog` settings for merc, should fix the
spotlights. There's a setting in the merc effect, and also a runtime
flag for the draw-control. I'm not actually sure what reads these, but
the draw-control one is definitely used to disable fog on the
spotlights.
- increase merc draw limit to try to fix the issue about partially drawn
citizens in the city
- remove useless debug prints (it's okay to die in init, and the medium
load buffer size mode is understood now)
Definitely needs a clean up pass, but I think the functionality is very
close.
There's a few "hacks" still:
- I am using the emerc logic for environment mapping, which doesn't care
about the length of the normals. I can't figure out how the normal
scaling worked in etie. I want to do a little bit more experimentation
with this before merging.
- There is some part about adgifs for TIE and ETIE that I don't
understand. The clearly correct behavior of TIE/ETIE is that the alpha
settings from the adgif shader are overwritten by the settings from the
renderer. But I can't figure out how this happens in all cases.
- Fade out is completely disabled. I think this is fine because the
performance difference isn't bad. But if you are comparing screenshots
with PCSX2, it will make things look a tiny bit different.
There are *a lot* of file changes and while I have carefully gone
through every gsrc change to fix up manual patches, there might still be
spots that I missed.
Three main changes:
- Adds support for the texture scrolling effect used on conveyor belts,
and turn it on for jak 2.
- Use merc instead of generic in jak 1 for ripple/water/texscroll stuff
(non-ocean water, lava, dark eco, etc). This is a pretty big speedup in
a lot of places.
- Fix a really old bug with blending mode used to draw environment maps.
The effect is that envmaps were half as bright as they should have been.
As usual, there's a flag to go back to the old behavior on jak 1. Set
these to `#t` to use generic like we used to.
```
*texscroll-force-generic*
*ripple-force-generic*
```
The format has changed, and everything must be rebuilt (C++, FR3's, GOAL
code)
Support rendering eyes with merc for both jak 1 and jak 2.
For jak 1, everything should look the same, but merc will be used to
draw eyes. This means that jak is now fully drawn with merc!
For jak 2, eyes should draw, but there are still a few issues:
- the tbp/clut ptr trick is used a lot for these eye textures, so
there's a lot that use the wrong texture
- I had to enable a bunch more "texture uploads" (basically emulating
the ps2 texture system) in order to get the eyes to upload. It would be
much better if the eye renderer could somehow grab the texture from the
merc model info, skipping the vram addressing stuff entirely. I plan to
return to this.
- I disabled some sky draws in `sky-tng`. After turning on pris2
uploads, the sky flashed in a really annoying way.
I didn't actually visually notice much of a difference with these hacks
unlike in Jak 1, but I also avoided checking the missions thoroughly
since the game crashes very often right now.
Adds the `pckernel` system to Jak 2, allowing you to do the PC-specific
things that Jak 1 lets you do like change game resolution, etc.
In other to reduce the amount of code duplication for something that
we're gonna be changing a lot over time, I split it into a few more code
files. In this new system, `pckernel-h.gc`, `pckernel-common.gc`
(previously `pckernel.gc`) and `pc-debug-common.gc` are the files that
should be shared across all games (I hacked the Jak 2 project to pull
these files from the Jak 1 folder), while `pckernel-impl.gc`,
`pckernel.gc` and `pc-debug-methods.gc` are their respective
game-specific counterparts that should be loaded after. I'm not fully
happy with this, I think it's slightly messy, but it cleanly separates
code that should be game-specific and not accidentally copied around and
code that should be the same for all games anyway.
Some people have complained about the button combo for entering the
speedrun menu, saying it's awkward to press Start.
This change lets you press Select instead (while holding L1+R1+X). The
old combo (pressing Start) still works as well.
Moves PC-specific entity and debug menu things to `entity-debug.gc` and
`default-menu-pc.gc` respectively and makes `(declare-file (debug))`
work as it should (no need to wrap the entire file in `(when
*debug-segment*` now!).
Also changes the DGO descriptor format so that it's less verbose. It
might break custom levels, but the format change is very simple so it
should not be difficult for anyone to update to the new format. Sadly,
you lose the completely useless ability to use DGO object names that
don't match the source file name. The horror!
I've also gone ahead and expanded the force envmap option to also force
the ripple effect to be active. I did not notice any performance or
visual drawbacks from this. Gets rid of some distracting LOD and some
water pools appearing super flat (and pitch back for dark eco).
Fixes#1424
This will probably take a while, since we also have to translate all the
text of the base game - Naughty Dog never translated this game to
Hungarian. This PR will stay a draft until it is complete.
We realized that every letter in our alphabet was already working, apart
from two: Ő and Ű (they are unique sounds, so leaving their marks
wouldn't be okay).
Since I did not find that double accent thing in the jak font, I decided
to use ~ (see my change in FontUtils.cpp). It is good enough, and my
memory tells me that I already saw this exact same "solution"
(workaround) somewhere in the past. If anyone knows a better solution,
please let us know.
We chose ID 14 for the Hungarian language, as it was the lowest free ID.
**Progress tracker**
A tick here means that everything was translated. It does not mean that
everything is perfect yet. We will review everything multiple times, to
have the best translations possible.
Game text:
- [x] base game text
- [x] pc port text
- [ ] credits text ?
[Sziloyoo](https://github.com/Sziloyoo) helped with reviewing my
changes, and gave advice/suggestions for some complicated translations.
Subtitles will be done in the future, not in this PR.
This PR adds a feature to merc2 to update vertices. This will be needed
to efficient do effects like blerc/ripple/texture scroll. It's enabled
for blerc in jak 1 and jak 2, but with a few disclaimers:
- currently we still use the mips2c blerc implementation, which is slow
and has some "jittering" because of integer precision. When porting to
PC, there was an additional synchronization problem because blerc
overwrites the merc data as its being read by the renderers. I _think_
this wasn't an issue on PS2 because the blerc dma is higher priority
than the VIF1 DMA, but I'm not certain. Either way, I had to add a mutex
for this on PC to avoid very slight flickering/gaps. This isn't ideal
for performance, but still beats generic by a significant amount in
every place I tested. If you see merc taking 2ms to draw, it is likely
because it is stuck waiting on blerc to finish. This will go away once
blerc itself is ported to C++.
- in jak 1, we end up using generic in some cases where we could use
merc. In particular maia in village3 hut. This will be fixed later once
we can use merc in more places. I don't want to mess with the
merc/generic selection logic when we're hopefully going to get rid of it
soon.
- There is no support for ripple or texture scroll. These use generic on
jak 1, and remain broken on jak 2.
- Like with `emerc`, jak 1 has a toggle to go back to the old behavior
`*blerc-hack*`.
- In most cases, toggling this causes no visual differences. One
exception is Gol's teeth. I believe this is caused by texture coordinate
rounding issues, where generic has an additional float -> int -> float
compared to PC merc. It is very hard to notice so I'm not going to worry
about it.