And how, might I ask, is analyzing film any better? After all, it is all fictional depictions that are made to look in a certain way to advance plot, or gameplay, or simply to "look cool." Analyzing a few frames that an artist made in a film so that he could make pretty things light up and go bang is hardly much more scientific than analyzing arbitrary constants and gameplay in a video game.fgalkin wrote:Game mechanics cannot be used for vs debating as they are just that, game mechanics. They are not always consistent with reality. An often cited and infamous example are Marines taking down Battlecruisers and Carriers in Starcraft. If we use game mechanics, we must conclude that it's possible to take down a mile-long ship in orbit by taking potshots at it with a rifle that has problems penetrating Zergling carapace in the cutscenes. See what I mean?Theotherguy wrote:The stats from Relic come directly from the programming of the game. You don't "make up" stats in video games. After all, a video game is essentially a simulation of the ships in combat, and the arbitrary values that a programmer gives to the ship is obeyed in the simulation. If that's "made up" I'm not sure what more you would want.Stark wrote:So you're using made-up stats and ingame measurements you've distorted. How is this valid?
Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
Let's take the Death Star scene as it destroys its first planet, for instance. We see, very clearly, a giant green beam of some sort (though it is not so giant in comparison to a planet) blasting into a planet and blowing it up with an explosion that looks like C4 or gunpowder exploding in air. A typical response to this sort of scene on this site is "oh look, that great big laser vaporized a planet! Planets have X amount of mass that's composed of Y. So this great big laser must have an energy of K terajoules! That's amazing!"
How is it that the second calculation is valid, but the calculation based on what is seen in a video game is invalid? How is it that one piece of fiction imagined by writers and put into place by artists is any more reliable than one piece of fiction imagined by designers and put into place by programmers?