You are describing what I described, the viewpunch primarily method, where the camera auto returns to nearly the original aimpoint, in a way that treats every shot after the first as… different.
What I am saying:
Each shot = view angle gets shifted upward by say 2 degrees (+/- range of 0.75) and then left/right -0.5 to 0.5, something like that.
So, for each shot, you feel the recoil and must adjust manually to return to your original point of aim.
Which is actually very realistic, if you’ve ever shot a gun. Thats… true for timed aimed single shots, not just full auto or bursts.
‘Your’ method, the viewpunch method, is basically this, but, the real recoil is 0 or much smaller for every shot after the first.
Which is kind of odd, from a realism perspective.
Typicially you have a crosshair, your ‘cone of fire’, that expands for each successive shot in rapid progression… that actually expands faster the more shots you fire in a given time frame, and then it usually maxes out at some max innaccuracy level.
But also typically… most games… do… what you are ‘suggesting’. That’s… the whole thing I am saying is basically ‘easy mode’.
It makes sense for joycon users, they already need auto-aim to come anywhere near close to being able compete on par with MK users.
The fairly small number of FPS games that went cross platform and either did not have auto aim or allowed servers to turn it off showed this very quickly, you can see in RDR2 or GTAV online for more recent examples of this (assuming you can find and instance that isn’t plauged with hackers…)
If you think that needing to physically account for each full auto, or rapidly repeated single/semi-auto shot… does not require actice physical effort for each shot… I don’t think you’ve ever aimed and a shot a weapon accurately in rapid succession.
I’m one of the seemingly very small amount of people who has both shot real world firearms, and designed entire game systems that simulate firearms.
There’s a fairly good chance half the advanced SWEP systems you may have ever encountered in Garry’s Mod are… ultimately derivatives of my code, that I wrote almost 20 years ago now.
You are describing what I described, the viewpunch primarily method, where the camera auto returns to nearly the original aimpoint, in a way that treats every shot after the first as… different.
What I am saying:
Each shot = view angle gets shifted upward by say 2 degrees (+/- range of 0.75) and then left/right -0.5 to 0.5, something like that.
So, for each shot, you feel the recoil and must adjust manually to return to your original point of aim.
Which is actually very realistic, if you’ve ever shot a gun. Thats… true for timed aimed single shots, not just full auto or bursts.
‘Your’ method, the viewpunch method, is basically this, but, the real recoil is 0 or much smaller for every shot after the first.
Which is kind of odd, from a realism perspective.
Typicially you have a crosshair, your ‘cone of fire’, that expands for each successive shot in rapid progression… that actually expands faster the more shots you fire in a given time frame, and then it usually maxes out at some max innaccuracy level.
But also typically… most games… do… what you are ‘suggesting’. That’s… the whole thing I am saying is basically ‘easy mode’.
It makes sense for joycon users, they already need auto-aim to come anywhere near close to being able compete on par with MK users.
The fairly small number of FPS games that went cross platform and either did not have auto aim or allowed servers to turn it off showed this very quickly, you can see in RDR2 or GTAV online for more recent examples of this (assuming you can find and instance that isn’t plauged with hackers…)
If you think that needing to physically account for each full auto, or rapidly repeated single/semi-auto shot… does not require actice physical effort for each shot… I don’t think you’ve ever aimed and a shot a weapon accurately in rapid succession.
I’m one of the seemingly very small amount of people who has both shot real world firearms, and designed entire game systems that simulate firearms.
There’s a fairly good chance half the advanced SWEP systems you may have ever encountered in Garry’s Mod are… ultimately derivatives of my code, that I wrote almost 20 years ago now.