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Preface, Introduction, and Minimum System Requirements
The authors would like to thank the many supporters of Quake Engine editing who made this work possible. Several sections in the manual are based on material written by dedicated fans. Others were "corrected" by fans who found undiscovered bugs in both the editor and game code. Where possible, we have noted the contributors in the sections they helped produce.
Paul Jaquays Robert A. Duffy
GtkRadiant note: This version of the manual has been adapted for GtkRadiant from the original Q3Radiant manual.
Part of the fun of games like Quake III Arena is the ability to add to your own ideas to a favorite game and then have others play and enjoy them. While the technical skills needed to create a 3D graphic engine is beyond many game fans, the skills and equipment necessary to make modifications to the game are not. It has become the custom of many game developers to share their development tools with the public. This allows fans make their own game content. The GtkRadiant editor is based on the software used by the designers at id to create the arenas in Quake III Arena. In fact, it's an improvement on that editor, since it contains features that have been added since the game was completed. If you are familiar with GtkRadiant's major ancestor, the QERadiant editor for Quake 2, then a good share of what's in this manual will be old hat to you. Whether you are a veteran mapmaker or new to the art of making game arenas, we think you will find some indispensible information in this manual. Now comes the caveat.
This manual will tell you how to use the tools, but not necessarily, how to make what you have in mind. Many fine on-line tutorial and resource sites will be listed at the end of the document.
The designers at id used Q3Radiant on some heavy-duty computing equipment to make their game maps. Despite the fact that Quake III Arena runs under several different operating systems, not every computer that can run Quake III Arena will be able to run the GtkRadiant editor. GtkRadiant runs on MS Windows 95/98/ME/NT4/2000/XP, MacOSX and Linux. The editor requires an Open GL 1.1 compliant 3D graphics acceleration card (it is expected that all cards capable of running Quake III Arena will be able to handle editor functions … although some may handle it better). A 3-button mouse gives the best performance.
The minimum system requirements generally require that preferences such as texture quality and screen resolution be set to absolute minimums. The editor will run on the systems described, but speed of operation and visual quality will probably be less than satisfactory. It should also be noted that you would be limited to working on relatively small maps with limited texture and model usage.
- Processor: P233mmx
- RAM: 64 meg
- Video Card: 4 Meg, software Open GL-compliant
- Screen Resolution: 1024 x 768
- Pointing Device: Two-button mouse*
The more powerful the machine, the better and usually faster the development experience. This will become especially true when you get to the point of compiling your maps (turning them from editor code into game code). It should come as no surprise that, more powerful machines will crunch the numbers faster when compiling a map. Processor: P2450 (or better) RAM: 128 meg** Video Card: Open GL accelerated video card Screen Resolution: 1280 x 1024 Pointing Device: Two-button mouse*
- This will work, but not well. A three-button mouse, even on a minimal system is highly preferred. ** id designers often found it convenient to work with several maps open at once. The recommended 128 Meg of RAM may not be enough to accommodate this.
What Doesn't Work (well) - and How to fix it
The key to a satisfactory editing experience is whether your video card supports the demands of the editor. The original id editor was designed for a workstation card called the Realizm, which ran on Intergraph workstations in a WinNT environment. Robert Duffy expanded this to include the Win9x operating systems and a number of other video cards. But not all video cards support the editor equally well. The G200 and G400 require updated drivers from Matrox The 3dfx Voodoo 3000 chipset requires a driver upgrade in order for the map grids to show. If the map grids don't appear when using some ATI chip sets, try turning the settings on you desktop up to 32 bit (true color). Nvidia TNT and GeFORCE have slowdown issues when the user selects curve patches. While this is a driver issue, it can be addressed by checking the "Solid selection boxes" feature under preferences.