Graphics engineer at Weta Workshop James Brown has an interesting hobby – he creates amazing displays. This time he built a device that resembles a crystal ball that rotates and displays a flickering three-dimensional image. And launched Doom on it.
We are not talking about classic Doom, but about its variant Voxel Doom, where each point of the game object is assigned a position in three-dimensional space, just like the points of a volumetric display created by an enthusiast. In reality, the display is not three-dimensional – it is an illusion. “It’s like a holographic fan, but instead of rotating a 1D strip to produce a 2D image, it rotates a 2D panel to produce a 3D image,” explained James Brown.
Initially, he planned that in order to create a three-dimensional image, the device should rotate at a speed of 300 revolutions per minute, but it later turned out that this was clearly not enough to produce smooth movement. In his microblog Mastodon, he showed several examples of how his 3D screen works. This is not only a Doom game, but also a lunar module show, these are skulls and dinosaur heads.
A Reddit user shared a shocking story about how his Gigabyte M6880X gaming mouse suddenly…
It has become known that the European Space Agency (ESA or ESA) plans to send…
Samsung has reduced the functionality of the S Pen stylus for the Galaxy S25 Ultra…
YouTube is offering paid subscribers new experimental features such as improved audio, offline viewing of…
Samsung and Google are jointly developing augmented reality glasses. The head of Samsung's mobile division,…
At the very end of the Galaxy Unpacked presentation, Samsung showed a glimpse of its…