Dear mobile game devs. When I play games like that, I always wonder if it’s the physics engine that’s actually random and produces the result?

Or is the result calculated before the animation happens, and dictates the animation?

I’ve always wondered. I have some notion of programming, but from far back, and I’ve been scratching my head long enough about this.

Thanks in advance.

  • conciselyverbose
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    fedilink
    210 months ago

    You could very easily just project the last bounce, and if it’s going to go into the good spot, cheat and adjust the path, based on predetermined odds. It wouldn’t be hard at all to turn a 1 in 7 chance if the physics would be uniformly distributed without cheating into 1 in 700.

    • @[email protected]
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      110 months ago

      True. I think this happens with pinball recall for lumosity. The level you’re on isn’t correlated to the number of bumpers on the board, but to path length. I figure they just try paths until one’s sufficiently long to be a challenge to the player.

      Unfortunately it has the opposite effect. I look at the board and my eyes instantly calculate all the paths and one’s the longest. No working memory required on my part. And that longest path is where the ball’s coming in 90% of the time. It sucks.