Gamedev Memes

Posts tagged with Gamedev

Working On A Raycasting Engine

Working On A Raycasting Engine
So you spent three weeks learning trigonometry, diving into DDA algorithms, and debugging why your walls look like a Salvador Dalí painting, only to realize John Carmack did this in 1992 on hardware that had less computing power than your smart toaster. And he did it while probably eating pizza and writing assembly like it was a casual Tuesday. The "box of triangles" bit hits different when you realize modern game engines abstract all this pain away with their fancy rendering pipelines, but back then? Carmack was literally casting rays and doing trigonometric calculations per pixel to fake 3D in Wolfenstein 3D. No GPU acceleration, no Unity, no "just import Three.js"—just raw math and the will to make demons shootable. Meanwhile, you're here in 2024 with Stack Overflow, ChatGPT, and 64GB of RAM, still struggling to get your raycaster to not crash when you look at a corner. Humbling stuff.

Thanks Valve !

Thanks Valve !
Valve really said "sure, flood our platform with AI slop" and then immediately added a scarlet letter system so everyone knows exactly what they're downloading. It's like opening a landfill and then handing out hazmat suits at the entrance. The crowd goes from cheering to celebrating even harder because now they can avoid the AI garbage with surgical precision. Honestly, it's a genius move—let the AI bros cook their procedurally generated asset flips while giving actual humans the ability to filter them out like spam emails. The free market, but with warning labels.

Its A Refreshing Change Of Other Companys

Its A Refreshing Change Of Other Companys
You know you're living in a dystopian tech world when praising literally everyone on the team gets you a standing ovation. Gaben and Valve have somehow cracked the code: treat your employees like humans, let them work on what they want, ship games when they're ready (Half-Life 3 notwithstanding), and don't crunch people into the ground. Meanwhile, the rest of the industry is out here with mandatory 80-hour weeks, layoffs after record profits, and CEOs taking home bonuses that could fund an indie studio for a decade. The bar is literally on the floor, and Valve just casually stepped over it while everyone else is doing limbo underneath. Support staff getting recognition? Revolutionary. Not treating devs like disposable code monkeys? Groundbreaking. It's wild that basic human decency in game dev is now considered a flex.

Are We In A Sim

Are We In A Sim
So we've got tech bros uploading their consciousness to the cloud for digital immortality, only to end up as NPCs in someone's Sims 4 save file. The .tar.gz format is chef's kiss here—because of course your eternal soul would be compressed using gzip. Nothing says "preserving human consciousness" quite like a tarball that'll probably get corrupted during extraction. The year 2050 timeline feels generous considering how fast Silicon Valley moves. By then, some teen will be torrenting these consciousness archives like they're season packs of a TV show, casually modding billionaire minds into digital servants who autonomously cook mac and cheese and get stuck in swimming pools without ladders. The ultimate revenge for all those "move fast and break things" mantras. Fun fact: A .tar.gz file is actually a two-step compression process—first tar (tape archive) bundles files together, then gzip compresses them. So your consciousness would literally be archived like it's going on backup tape storage from the 1980s. Peak irony for the cloud computing crowd.

Thank You, Mother

Thank You, Mother
You know that crushing moment when you're desperately trying to justify your existence to the people who raised you? Three weeks of debugging, refactoring, optimizing collision detection, and implementing that smooth camera movement system. But when it's demo time, all they see is a character moving left and right for 15 seconds before you hit a game-breaking bug you swore you fixed yesterday. Their polite "It's quite cool" hits different than any code review ever could. They're trying their best to be supportive, but you can see in their eyes they're wondering if you should've become a dentist instead. Meanwhile, you're internally screaming about the 47 classes, 2000 lines of code, and that one Stack Overflow answer that saved your life at 2 AM. The real kicker? If you showed them a polished AAA game, they'd have the same reaction. Non-technical folks just don't understand that those 15 seconds represent your blood, sweat, and approximately 47 cups of coffee.

Why Playtesting Is Important

Why Playtesting Is Important
Developer proudly ships their shiny new chat feature for the multiplayer game. First player to test it in production? Immediately weaponizes it by pasting the entire Bee Movie script into the chat, causing a catastrophic game freeze for everyone in the lobby. Classic case of not stress-testing input validation. The dev probably thought "nobody would paste that much text into a chat box, right?" Wrong. Players will always find the most creative ways to break your stuff. No character limit? That's an invitation. No rate limiting? Challenge accepted. No input sanitization? Say hello to the entire works of Shakespeare. The ":D" at the end really captures the chaotic energy of someone who just discovered they can DoS an entire game lobby with copypasta. Quality assurance? Never heard of her.

And People Wonder Why Indie Games Are So Beloved These Days Over AAA

And People Wonder Why Indie Games Are So Beloved These Days Over AAA
Big AAA studios with infinite budgets slapping AI into everything to "save money" while indie devs are out here actually crafting games with passion and soul. The irony? The billion-dollar companies are cutting corners with generative AI while the solo dev eating ramen in their apartment is hand-crafting every pixel. It's like watching a Michelin-star restaurant serve microwave dinners while the food truck down the street is making everything from scratch. And then the AAA studios wonder why players prefer the indie games that actually feel like someone cared about making them.

Solo Indie Gamedev

Solo Indie Gamedev
The vicious cycle that keeps indie devs trapped in their basements for years. You start with this beautiful vision of your dream game, then reality hits and you're building some janky prototype that looks like it was made in MS Paint. But instead of shipping it, perfectionism kicks in and you spend 6 months tweaking the lighting on a tree nobody will notice. Meanwhile, your bank account is sending you increasingly aggressive notifications, but you can't release it yet because "it's not ready." So you loop back to the dream, convincing yourself this time will be different. The phone screen showing "death in poverty - incoming call" with two answer buttons is chef's kiss. Like you have a choice but you're answering either way. That's the indie gamedev life—you know what's coming but you do it anyway because you're in too deep now.

It's Hard Finding The Right People To Show It To

It's Hard Finding The Right People To Show It To
You just spent 72 hours building the most gorgeous side project of your ENTIRE LIFE, and you're bursting with excitement to show someone—ANYONE—who will appreciate your genius. But then reality hits like a segfault: your non-programmer friends will just nod politely while their eyes glaze over, and your family will ask if you can fix their printer now. The tragic existence of a developer is having nobody who understands why your perfectly optimized algorithm or that slick UI animation deserves a standing ovation. So there you are, desperately trying to show your masterpiece to people who think "backend" is a compliment about jeans.

The Temptation To Waste Money Can Be Strong

The Temptation To Waste Money Can Be Strong
Game devs scrolling through Unity Asset Store or Unreal Marketplace at 2 AM be like: "Ooh, a photorealistic medieval tavern pack for $89.99! My game is set in space, but I NEED this." The rational part of your brain knows you're making a 2D puzzle game, but that AAA-quality dragon model is calling your name like a siren. Next thing you know, your project folder has 47GB of unused assets and your bank account is crying. The struggle is real—you're literally drowning in temptation, desperately trying to escape before you click "Add to Cart" on that anime character bundle that has absolutely zero relevance to your survival horror game.

S&Box Went Open-Source And The Comments Are Very Calm

S&Box Went Open-Source And The Comments Are Very Calm
Oh, nothing screams "professional codebase" quite like opening your source code to the public and having every single comment be an existential crisis wrapped in profanity. Someone named Garry is having a COMPLETE meltdown in the comments, questioning the very fabric of reality with gems like "why the fuck does this exist" and "this is fucking disgusting." Meanwhile, we've got warnings about not storing destroyed instances "for fuck sake," path comparison methods that are apparently a cosmic joke, and buffer sizes set to absolutely unhinged values because, and I quote, "fuck it, let's set these to insane values." The cherry on top? A beautiful Log.Error("Fucked"); followed by a return statement. Not "error occurred" or "operation failed"—just straight up "Fucked." That's the kind of raw, unfiltered honesty you get when developers think their code will never see the light of day. And now it's open-source! The transparency we deserve but definitely didn't ask for. 💀

Silence, Objective Analysis Is Talking

Silence, Objective Analysis Is Talking
Oh, the SACRED RITUAL of game performance discussions! 🙄 You bring forth your meticulously collected data, benchmarks, and frame rate analyses showing a game is an optimization DISASTER... only to be SMITED by the almighty "works on my machine" defense! Because clearly, your exhaustive technical evidence is no match for Brad's magical gaming rig that can apparently run Cyberpunk on a toaster. The gaming community's version of putting fingers in ears and screaming "LA LA LA CAN'T HEAR YOU!" Truly the digital equivalent of bringing science to a feelings fight. ✨