- Joined
- Jun 14, 2003
- Messages
- 1,814
- Solutions
- 7
- Reaction score
- 366
- Points
- 115
- Favorite Pinball Machine
- The one that gives you a gumball
Shocky, I'm not sure if you can read VPF. I wanted to show you a couple of FS tables with settings to try. To me, your opinion is always worth reading on Visual Pinball
First, in a FS table, to keep the ball round, round bumpers and everything in it's correct scale, the xScale and the yScale must remain at a 4x3 scale. This means you can also rotate tables and play them on a 4x3 monitor also. Then you use the Inclination and Field of View to fill the screen in anyway you'd prefer, rather than the way it's been done so far. This works great for rotated desktops, I'm not trying to make improvements to cabinet FS as they seem to love it the way it is and I don't want a cabinet anyway. It also does wonders for the look of the flippers....
Keep in mind, you can change the Inclination and Field of view to achieve all sorts of different effects, you just need to keep the xScale and the yScale in 4x3 as VP is written for 4x3.
Below is a Dolly Parton rotated table for a 4x3 monitor and the settings to start with. 16x9 rotated monitor for Attack and Revenge from Mars, both JP tables as he keeps most of them angle independent.
I'm sure that's enough to get you experimenting. :)
First, in a FS table, to keep the ball round, round bumpers and everything in it's correct scale, the xScale and the yScale must remain at a 4x3 scale. This means you can also rotate tables and play them on a 4x3 monitor also. Then you use the Inclination and Field of View to fill the screen in anyway you'd prefer, rather than the way it's been done so far. This works great for rotated desktops, I'm not trying to make improvements to cabinet FS as they seem to love it the way it is and I don't want a cabinet anyway. It also does wonders for the look of the flippers....
Keep in mind, you can change the Inclination and Field of view to achieve all sorts of different effects, you just need to keep the xScale and the yScale in 4x3 as VP is written for 4x3.
Below is a Dolly Parton rotated table for a 4x3 monitor and the settings to start with. 16x9 rotated monitor for Attack and Revenge from Mars, both JP tables as he keeps most of them angle independent.
I'm sure that's enough to get you experimenting. :)