Need avis of HalfLife 2 for presentation

  • Thread starter Thread starter QA.Mitch
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QA.Mitch

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I'm giving a presentation at a QA conference next month, and I'm comparing testing with playing HalfLife 2. I planned to show videos of the game, but my computer isn't fast enough to make decent AVIs -- they're way too choppy.

I'll give you full credit in the presentation. They're short sequences and easy to record, so I don't think it would be that difficult. Here's what I need.

1. Getting killed by a Headcrab, while holding a Crowbar but not using it.
2. Same as #1, but killing the Headcrab with the Crowbar.
3. Getting killed by a Headcrab Zombie while attacking it once or twice with the Crowbar.
4. Same as #3, but killing the Headcrab Zombie by shooting it with the Pistol.
5. Getting killed by a Strider while attacking it with the Crowbar
6. Same as #5, but getting killed by a Strider while shooting it with the Pistol.
7. Same as #5, but killing the Strider by shooting it with the Laser-Guided Rocket Launcher
8. Walk through a gas fire wall (from an open gas valve) and taking damage, but not getting killed.
9. Same as #8, but first turning off the gas valve so that the fire wall goes away you don't take any damage.

That's it! Email me at [email protected] for more information.
 
You don't need a fast computer to record AVIs.

1) Record in-game demo using the "record <demoname>" command
2) Use the command host_framerate 30 to force the engine to 30 frames per second
3) Type "startmovie <moviename>" followed by "playdemo <demoname>" to start playing back your previously-recorded demo, dumping each frame to disk along with a wav file of the audio.
4) Combine the frames and the wav file with a package like Adobe Premiere, ensuring that you import it all at 30 frames per second
5) Export the whole lot as an avi (after whatever editing you want to do)
 
I'll try that

Thanks. I'll try that. Usually my "playdemo" always comes back choppy so I assumed that any AVI that I created from it would also be choppy. Guess I was wrong. (I also don't have Adobe Premiere but I'm sure there are other packages I can use.)

Still, if anyone would like to make some of these videos for me, I would gladly accept the help!
--Mitch
 
the host_framerate command makes choppiness irrelevant. It will look choppy as hell when it plays back, but it exports every frame and the accompanying sound in perfect 30fps loveliness.
 
yeah, and you can record the demo with video settings on low for smoothness, then before playing back the demo you can up all the settings to max and still get a movie as smooth as silk!!
 
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