Game development Memes

Posts tagged with Game development

The Main Obstacle In Finishing A Game: Scope Creep

The Main Obstacle In Finishing A Game: Scope Creep
You start with "I'll make a simple platformer" and somehow end up with a sniper rifle pointed at a Minecraft creeper. That's scope creep in its purest form—literally. Every game dev knows this pain. You begin with a basic concept, then suddenly you're adding multiplayer, procedural generation, ray tracing, a crafting system, dynamic weather, NPC relationships, and before you know it, you've got a sniper scope attached to your simple game idea. The project that was supposed to take 3 months is now entering year 4. The visual pun here is *chef's kiss*—scope creep has evolved into an actual scope creeping into your game. Now instead of finishing your indie pixel art adventure, you're implementing ballistics physics and wind resistance calculations. Feature creep: not even once.

Gamedevs Are Gods

Gamedevs Are Gods
Ah yes, the casual Friday afternoon task: implementing a destructor that literally ends existence itself. While the rest of us peasants write functions to free up memory or close database connections, game developers are out here casually coding the apocalypse. Just another method in the World class, no big deal. "Oh this? Yeah, it just destroys the world and everything in it. Pushed it to prod last Tuesday." The best part? That comment is doing some heavy lifting. Like, thanks for clarifying that destroying the world also destroys everything IN the world. Wouldn't want any confusion about the scope of our omnipotent destructor. Really appreciate the documentation on this one.

In Light Of The Recent Kingdom Come Deliverance 2 News

In Light Of The Recent Kingdom Come Deliverance 2 News
Kingdom Come Deliverance 2 apparently got some flak for using AI-generated voiceovers, and the gaming community's reaction is basically "nobody's cool... except indie devs who somehow resist the siren call of AI automation." It's wild how we've reached a point where NOT using AI is the flex. Like, imagine telling a developer from 2015 that in the future, manually doing work would be the chad move. The bar has literally inverted itself – we went from "look how much we automated!" to "look, we actually paid humans!" It's giving very strong "I use Arch BTW" energy but for game development. The indie devs out here hand-crafting dialogue like artisanal sourdough while AAA studios are speedrunning the AI pipeline.

Maxerals

Maxerals
Someone clearly had a stroke while typing "Minerals" and just committed it anyway. The best part? It's in a Cost struct right next to the correctly spelled "Minerals" field. So now we've got both minerals AND maxerals in our economy system, because apparently one wasn't enough. Either this is the most creative typo that made it past code review, or there's a parallel universe where maxerals are a legitimate resource type. My money's on the developer being three energy drinks deep at 2 AM and the reviewer just clicking "Approve" without reading.

Gameplay Is Temporary, Perfect Settings Are Forever

Gameplay Is Temporary, Perfect Settings Are Forever
Buying a game barely registers as a conscious thought. Playing it? Sure, that's when the neurons start firing. But modding? Now your brain's getting somewhere. Then you spend 5 hours tweaking config files, adjusting FOV sliders, installing shader packs, and fine-tuning keybinds until your brain achieves enlightenment. You'll launch the game exactly once with your perfect settings, realize you need to adjust the shadow quality by 2%, and never actually finish the tutorial. The real endgame is a flawless settings.ini file that you'll back up more religiously than your production database.

Crazy How They Didn't Have Any Announcement About This Before Crimson Desert Launched

Crazy How They Didn't Have Any Announcement About This Before Crimson Desert Launched
Intel really just threw Pearl Abyss under the bus with the most passive-aggressive corporate statement ever written. "We reached out MANY times" is basically the professional equivalent of "I sent you 47 emails, Karen." The side-eye monkey perfectly captures Intel's energy here—just absolutely SEETHING with that polite corporate rage while watching a game launch with zero optimization for their graphics cards. Pearl Abyss out here launching Crimson Desert like "graphics drivers? never heard of her" while Intel's been sitting in their inbox with test hardware, engineering resources, and the patience of a saint. The betrayal is PALPABLE. Nothing says "we tried to help but they ghosted us" quite like publicly listing every single GPU generation you were willing to support. Corporate pettiness at its finest.

It's Kinda Sad That Those 20 People Won't Get To Experience This Game Of The Year

It's Kinda Sad That Those 20 People Won't Get To Experience This Game Of The Year
So Intel finally decided to enter the discrete GPU market with their Arc series, and game developers are being... optimistic. The buff doge represents devs enthusiastically claiming they support Intel Arc GPUs in 2026, while the wimpy doge reveals the harsh reality: they don't have the budget to actually optimize for it. The joke here is that Intel Arc has such a tiny market share that supporting it is basically a charity project. The title references those "20 people" who actually own Intel Arc GPUs and won't be able to play whatever AAA game this is. It's the classic scenario where developers have to prioritize NVIDIA and AMD (who dominate the market) while Intel Arc users are left wondering if their GPU was just an expensive paperweight. The contrast between "Tangy HD" (a simple indie game) getting Arc support versus "Crimson Desert" (a massive AAA title) not having the budget is chef's kiss irony. Because yeah, if you can't afford to support a GPU that like 0.5% of gamers own, just say that.

DLSS On vs Off

DLSS On vs Off
DLSS (Deep Learning Super Sampling) is NVIDIA's AI-powered upscaling tech that makes your potato GPU think it's a 4090. The left side shows your standard low-poly character model looking like it crawled out of a 2003 flash game. Flip DLSS on and suddenly you've got a photorealistic grizzled veteran with individually rendered beard hairs and the weight of a thousand git merge conflicts in his eyes. It's basically the graphics equivalent of adding TypeScript to your JavaScript project—same underlying mess, but now it looks professional enough to ship to production.

Writing My Own Game Engine Is Fun

Writing My Own Game Engine Is Fun
Every game dev's tragic love story: You start building your dream game, but then that sweet, sweet temptation of writing your own engine from scratch whispers in your ear. Next thing you know, you're six months deep into implementing quaternion math and custom memory allocators while Unity and Unreal are RIGHT THERE, fully functional, battle-tested, and ready to go. But noooo, you just HAD to reinvent the wheel because "it'll be more optimized" and "I'll learn so much." Spoiler alert: your game still doesn't exist, but hey, at least you have a half-working physics engine that crashes when two objects collide at exactly 47 degrees!

DLSS 5 Demo - Tomb Raider 1

DLSS 5 Demo - Tomb Raider 1
NVIDIA's marketing department promised DLSS would enhance graphics quality, but apparently nobody told them it shouldn't work backwards . The "without DLSS5" shot shows the classic low-poly Lara Croft from 1996 looking relatively smooth, while "with DLSS5" somehow manages to make her face even more angular and aggressive—like the AI tried to "enhance" the polygons by making them fight each other. DLSS (Deep Learning Super Sampling) is supposed to use AI to upscale lower-resolution images to higher resolutions while maintaining quality. But slapping cutting-edge AI upscaling tech on a game that was built with like 230 polygons total is the equivalent of using a neural network to enhance a stick figure drawing—you're just gonna get a really detailed stick figure that somehow looks worse. The real joke here is that no amount of machine learning can save those 1996-era triangle counts. Some things are better left in their original pixelated glory.

DLSS 5: Finally, A Technology That Renders Exactly What The Developers Didn't Intend

DLSS 5: Finally, A Technology That Renders Exactly What The Developers Didn't Intend
DLSS (Deep Learning Super Sampling) is supposed to make your games look better by using AI to upscale graphics. But apparently DLSS 5 has achieved sentience and decided to upgrade your janky game models into actual photorealistic humans. The developer probably spent 3 hours modeling that NPC in Blender, and DLSS just went "nah, let me fix that for you." The irony here is beautiful: we've gone from "it's not a bug, it's a feature" to "it's not a feature, it's AI hallucinating better graphics than we actually made." Game devs are out here rendering low-poly characters to save on performance, and NVIDIA's AI is basically saying "hold my tensor cores" and rendering a full photoshoot instead. Pretty soon we'll need a setting called "Disable AI Improvements" just to see what the game actually looks like. The future is weird, folks.

I Thought It Was An April Fools Joke

I Thought It Was An April Fools Joke
Game developers spent literal years painstakingly scanning Harrison Ford's face to recreate Indiana Jones with photorealistic detail. Then Nvidia drops their AI face generation tech and just... casually does it instantly. Bethesda's out here endorsing technology that basically makes their entire facial scanning pipeline obsolete. It's like spending months hand-crafting a masterpiece only to watch someone 3D print the same thing in 5 minutes. The look on Indiana Jones' face says it all – that's the exact expression of every technical artist who just realized their job got automated. Nothing says "we support innovation" quite like publicly backing the tech that makes your own workflow look like you're still using punch cards.