In this ep, we discuss a film by Patrick Zeugirdor, which uses the game BeamNG to simulate realistic freeway crashes. The game features advanced physics and modding capabilities, allowing for detailed crash simulations. The film shows various crash scenarios, each with multiple camera perspectives, highlighting the game’s recamming feature. We debate the film’s educational value, its potential to encourage poor driving behavior, and its popularity due to morbid curiosity – a good combination? Suffice to say, it evokes some strong emotions from us! We also discuss the game’s potential for use in narrative storytelling and its realistic portrayal of accidents.
This week is our monthly news ep. We discuss various developments in the machinima and virtual production community. Tracy mentions the Reallusions 2024 3D Character Contest, highlighting Stefan Dufour’s entry. Phil and Tracy discuss the potential of AI in character creation. Damien reports on Activision shutting down a Call of Duty mod and the impact of AI on modding. We also cover the Dragon Age: The Veil Guard game, the Secret Level series on Amazon Prime, and the new game inZOI. Phil introduces Daz AI Studio, a generative AI platform for DAZ Studio, and reflects on the impact of AI on the music industry, sharing the story of composer Sasha transitioning to AI-generated music.
YouTube Version of This Episode
Show Notes & Links
Reallusion’s 3D Character Creator Contest entries link here.
Skibidi Toilet being made into a Michael Bay movie? Reported in Eurogamer here.
Sandbox game launched –
Celebrating Team Fortress 2 creators – check this out, by MrEditsMan –
Activision shuts down CoD mod, as reported in GamesRadar here.
Dragon Age: The Veilguard trailer (feature image for this post), here –
I build all of my own PC’s from scratch. Have done for almost 20 years now. It’s not for everyone as there is a lot of research and detail work that you need to do. But every 3 or 4 years I either upgrade my current PC build or build a new one.
This year I decided to upgrade as money is a little tight. I figured I could re-use several key parts of my old PC build and just buy the new parts I need.
I was inspired to do this by a video I saw on YouTube: This Micro ATX PC Build Hits the Spot by Mr. Matt LeeIt is a beautiful video with no words. None of that high energy spiel that can be so annoying. Nope. Matt just shows his build process in beautifully framed shots backed by wonderful music –
Micro ATX is a much smaller form factor than the ATX size of my current build. Approximately half of the size it looks like.
I started pricing and research and decided to build around the case that Matt Lee featured: The Lian Li A3 Dan case which was about $70 on amazon. I also wanted to continue with an AMD processor because they run cooler and require less power than Intel. I bought an AMD 7600 CPU which was approximately $180.
I was thinking of going with liquid cooling, but the space at the top of the case looked tight, so I went with a two fan Arctic Cooler (cheap at $46)
I needed a new motherboard since it was going into the MicroATX form factor. This was hard since there are several good candidates, but eventually I went with a more expense mobo – Asus Rog Strix. I’ve had good experiences using Asus motherboards and this one had excellent reviews. This motherboard put me back about $299
I carried over my case fans and GPU from my old system – AMD 7800x (and excellent, but very large card). Also, I was bringing over a 1000 was power supply, but concerned about its size (ATX power and huge).
Total cost for upgrade = $600.
With all of the parts in hand, I began the build and immediately found problems with the size of my power supply. Fortunately, the Lian Li case has an adjustable power case, so I was just able to fit it in with the big GPU. Hit the on button and
Nothing.
I’ve never built a system that didn’t at least turn on when I pushed the power button for the first time. After a evening checking connections and thinking, I felt it was the power supply that was the problem, so I purchased an SFX sized (much smaller) PSU from Lian Li for $150
Started the build again from the beginning and loved how efficient and small the power supply was. Pushed the power button and the machine started right up. Booted into the bios and changed the boot order so I could install Windows 11 from a USB stick and I was off to the races.
However, fans were a problem. Only one set of fans were spinning the others (5 chassis fans) were not. This problem blossomed into 3 days of stress and frustration. You see, the Asus motherboard only has two motherboard fan headers with a third designed for a liquid cooler mother (but can be used for fans). The problem was getting all of the fans hooked into power.
After ordering two sets of fans (6 total) and a special Arctic Cooler power hub, I was able to get all of my fans working like they should. This put me back another $250. And I realized that the Matt Lee video did not cover installation of fans and their power issues. It would have saved me time and expense if he did.
Finally, after spending $850 for all of my parts, and about a week of frustration, I have an excellent PC that sits on my desk and plays Elden Ring at its highest resolution.
Advice: study your system carefully before you start spending money. I thought I did, but I missed the fan power issues and the fact that I would have to remove the GPU every time I changed the bottom 3 fan cluster. Since the MicroATX form factor is much smaller, it has fewer headers for fans. Consider a $10 fan hub from Arctic Cooler as it will solve all of your problems.
What is #machinima?! Good question these days, and this week we review a new video essay on tackling just that question… which is always interesting for us pioneers and vets to reflect on in this podcast. In the vid we review, Collin Aull introduces a few thoughts we’ve not really considered before, plus some comments we’ve discussed many times over the years, so its worth a listen as well as if you want to spot some of the older machinimas from those very early years in the narrative edit.
YouTube Version of this Episode
Show Notes & Links
The Game of Video – Machinima Video Essay by Collin Aull, released 9 April 2024
Other machinima videos about machinime we’ve seen over the years…
Machinima with Officer Dan (2006) by Amorphous Blog Productions…
Street Talkin’ (2006) by Amorphous Blob Productions…
This week we take a look at another stunning Team Fortress 2 short called Assault on 2Fort by JP Stevens aka Lolripk, a recommendation made to us by Dominzki (whose own TF2 short we reviewed in E135). What a great choice this is: we loved this film, a classic RED vs BLU tale but with a layer of emotion that is as beautifully portrayed as it is unexpected in SFM. These characters have real depth to them and we note how that’s been achieved, even though the focal character doesn’t even speak. Did we mention the fight choreography too? We reflect on the game lore, the significance of the community in the creative process, and how this story is told from an unusal perspective. We also reflect on why machinima series almost never complete… but we certainly hope Lolripk doesn’t follow the pattern!
YouTube Version of This Episode
Show Notes & Links
Assault on 2Fort by Lolripk, released 9 July 2022 –
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