9/1/2023 0 Comments Hifi rush nintendo switch![]() ![]() And then when colour came along, a similar technique was used to layer colours and dots to create endless variations of them. The idea was simple: use dots close together to make darker areas or spread apart to make lighter areas, and at a distance, the human eye wouldn't really see them, the dots, only a black and white shaded image. #indiecomics #comics #howtomakecomics #manga ♬ Lo-Fi analog beat - Gloveity To see this content please enable targeting cookies. It was invented as a way for the commercial printing press to do pictures without having hard-carved blocks of wood, which were probably really annoying to use. Halftone is the process that uses many dots to shade an image. And the minute I saw it working in the video, I saw comics and got that emotional response.ĭuo Shade, then, is clearly responsible for the lines part of the comic look.īut what about the dots? They are to do with halftone, which I'd been unwittingly seeing around me for years. It's a video about an old comic shading process called Duo Shade, which is wild by the way - it involved applying a pair of solvents to paper to reveal darker lines underneath. I think you can feel this in a video by Bad Ink Studios on TikTok. But look out for the dots and lines - you might need to enlarge the player - because that's the thing I'm talking about. Any excuse to gawp at Spider-Verse again. Whatever it is, it probably signals to your brain good things. When we see comics, it taps our nostalgia and whatever our memories of them are - maybe you read them, maybe you just like what grew out of them. There's a lot to be said for it: it not only looks more interesting, just like you do as a K-pop star using an Instagram filter, but it has the double-benefit of being hardwired into our consciousnesses. That's absolutely the case for Spider-Man and it's probably not far from the thinking behind the games too. And if you cast the, um, web a little wider, you'll see it in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse - and what a wonderful film that was.īut why - why are they all doing it? Well, the obvious answer is that they want to look like an old-fashioned comic strip. Superfuse, which comes out today (in early access), does it too. XCOM: Chimera Squad did it a couple of years ago, and 3DS game Code Name: STEAM did it a few years before that. Hi-Fi Rush is not the first game to do it. It's a bit like shading but oversized and deliberate, and layered on almost like a filter. ![]() It's to do with the look of it, those lines and dots you see applied to environments around you. Have you noticed something about Hi-Fi Rush? Beyond it being a lot of colourful fun, that is. ![]()
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