I just don’t get it - let’s spend so much money, development and hardware to render the most clean game possible, avoid aliasing and increase detail… And then let’s enable color distortion as if we were vieweing the game through a 1930’s cinema projector. Add in some film grain too! This saves me the effort of covering my monitor with dirt!

Make sure to make those options enabled by default on every game you release too!

  • BallShapedMan@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Depends on the game. I’m 50/50 on this I feel. Vignetting and film grain I always turn off. Lens flair is annoying most of the time too but of this list I find chromatic abortion to be the least offensive.

    • loobkoob@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I think vignette and film grain can both look great in small doses and in the right situations, but they have to be really subtle. If you can actively see them, it’s already far too much. Unfortunately, most games go wayyyy overboard with them.

      Film grain has a few psychological effects:

      • it can evoke a sense of nostalgia, as if you’re watching old footage
      • it can add texture, which can stop players from perceiving flat textures as being as, well, flat, stop jagged edges from standing out as much, and adding a sense of depth
      • it can make something feel more “genuine” - rather than being clean, edited, almost clinical feeling, film grain can make things feel a little more raw and believable
      • it can add a “documentary feel”, especially combined with camera shake (another thing a lot of games are far too liberal with, but that can be great in the right moment/dosage) which can make the player/viewer feel more like they’re in the action themselves
      • a lot of cinematic masterpieces were filmed on analogue film. Film grain is something people subconsciously associate with something being cinematic, to the point where a lot of modern film/TV that’s shot on digital cameras (and therefore doesn’t have film grain) will have digital noise added to emulate the effect. Games do it for the same reason.

      As for vignette, I think this is far more niche and definitely something that isn’t used well in a lot of games. The biggest reasons to use it are:

      • to draw the player/viewer’s eye to the centre of the screen/frame
      • to reduce the player’s peripheral vision - this can be good for horror games to add a feeling of claustrophobia, or in any genre when the player is wounded (although many games will add fairly distinctive bloody overlays rather than a simple vignette)
      • during low-light situations - like above, but it can really sell the darkness a lot more (on top of actual low-lighting effects) if there’s a well-done vignette.

      The thing is, both things need to be used in tasteful quantities, and ideally done dynamically. Just plastering them over the entire screen all the time looks terrible, whereas using them in specific situations and being more selective with how they’re applied - like in low-light situations, certain environments, or specific story moments - can work really well. And most developers simply don’t do that.