MREA (Metroid Prime): Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 02:01, 23 May 2016

See MREA (File Format) for the other revisions of this format.

The MREA format defines areas (rooms) in Metroid Prime. It's a massive format that contains tons of different data, including terrain geometry, collision, objects, lights, and more.


To do:
There's a LOT of sections that are mostly known, but need some documentation written up. SCLY and collision need separate articles (although the unique parts of the collision format, like the octree, could maybe be documented here). The rest should probably stay on this page.
This file format is almost completely documented
Discounting unknowns within the actual data sections, the only things that aren't known are what the .


Format

Like CMDL, MREA files are split up into a number of 32-byte aligned sections. Every section both starts and ends on a 32-byte boundary. These are used to separate different parts of the file; different types of sections typically indicate different sets of data. The header declares the section count and the size of each one; using these is the only way to navigate the file.

Header

Offset Type Count Name Notes
0x0 u32 1 Magic Always 0xDEADBEEF.
0x4 u32 1 Version See hub article for a list of possible version numbers.
0x8 float 12 Area Transform Matrix that represents the area's transform from the origin. Most area data is pre-transformed, so this matrix is only used occasionally.
0x38 u32 1 World Model Count Number of world models in this area.
0x3C u32 1 Data Section Count Number of data sections in the file.
0x40 u32 1 World Geometry Section Section index for world geometry data. Always 0; starts on materials.
0x44 u32 1 Script Layers Section Section index for script layer data.
0x48 u32 1 Collision Section Section index for collision data.
0x4C u32 1 Unknown Section Section index for unknown data.
0x50 u32 1 Lights Section Section index for light data.
0x54 u32 1 Visibility Tree Section Section index for visibility tree data.
0x58 u32 1 Path Section Section index for path data.
0x5C u32 1 Area Octree Section Section index for area octree data.
0x60 u32 Data Section Count Data Section Sizes Array containing the size of each data section in the file. Every size is always a multiple of 32.
End of header; pad to 32 bytes before first data section begins

Data Sections

MREA data sections are in the file in the following order:

Identifier Name
World Geometry
AROT Area Octree
SCLY Script Layers
0xDEAFBABE Collision
Unknown
0xBABEDEAD Lights
VISI Visibility Tree
Path

World Geometry

See Materials (Metroid Prime) and Geometry (Metroid Prime)

MREA files have one material section, followed by a number of world models, each of which has its own set of geometry sections. There's couple small differences you'll usually see on world models compared to regular CMDL ones:

  • Normals are always shorts, so vertex format 0 is never used.
  • Most world models use lightmaps, so normally the first UV coordinate on each vertex will read from the short UV array. This isn't always the case, though; you need to make sure you check the material so you know where to read from.
  • Surfaces will usually have a bounding box in the extra data in the surface header. This bounding box is used for depth sorting.
  • Each world model starts with an extra header section which is formatted like this:
Offset Type Count Name Notes
0x0 Visor Flags 1 Visor Flags 32-bit bitfield that sets parameters controlling how the mesh renders in different visors.
0x4 float 12 World Model Transform World model's transform from the area's local origin. The geometry data is pre-transformed, so this matrix can largely be ignored.
0x34 float 6 World Model Bounding Box Pre-transformed axis-aligned bounding box for this model.
0x4C End of mesh header section
Visor Flags
Bit Hex Description
0 0x1 Unknown
1 0x2 Disable rendering in Combat/Scan Visor
2 0x4 Disable rendering in Thermal Visor
3 0x8 Disable rendering in X-Ray Visor
4-5 0x30 Thermal heat level.
  • 0 - Cool
  • 1 - Hot
  • 2 - Warm

Area Octree

Main article: AROT (MREA Section)

The AROT section stores the area's octree, accelerating back-to-front rendering of contained meshes, it is also used for spacial queries such as collision.

Script Layers

To do:
SCLY is definitely complicated enough to need its own article.

The SCLY section contains data for objects.

Collision

To do:
Collision needs a separate article because it shares so many similarities with DCLN. How should we document the parts where the format diverges, though?

You have three guesses what the collision section is for, and the first two don't count.

Unknown Section

This one is sandwiched between collision and lights, and usually just contains a single 32-bit "1". Purpose is unknown.

Lights

This section is for dynamic lights, see the Light article for details.

Visibility Tree

This section is labeled "VISI". This section is sometimes not actually present in the file, labeled with a size of 0.

Path

This is the final section in the file; it's always 0x20 bytes, and its only value is a single PATH file ID.

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