Lights (Metroid Prime)

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Revision as of 21:02, 18 March 2015 by >Aruki
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The lights section in Metroid Prime areas defines several different types of lights: local ambient, directional, spot, and custom. Every light type has the same structure in the file; however, different types are utilized in different ways by the engine. This particular light format can be found in Metroid Prime 1 and 2.


This file format is almost completely documented
Lights are mostly figured out; the remaining unknowns are very likely unused, because the game's code never accesses them or passes them to the main light class, but it would be good to have some double-checking.


Format

The header for the light section is extremely simple and consists of the magic value 0xBABEDEAD. It's then followed by two arrays of lights, each preceded by a light count.

Light

Each light is a 0x41-byte struct. Note that the same structure is used for every light type, but not every value is used by every type; in fact, some of them aren't used by any of them.

Offset Type Description Notes
0x0 long Light Type
0x4 float3 Light Color
0x10 float3 Position
0x1C float3 Direction
0x28 float Multiplier Color multiplier for local ambient, used to calculate attenuation coefficients for spot/custom
0x2C float Spot Cutoff
0x30 float Unknown Possibly unused
0x34 byte Unknown Possibly unused
0x35 float Unknown Possibly unused
0x39 long Falloff Type Possible values: 0 - Constant; 1 - Linear; 2 - Quadratic
0x3D float Unknown Possibly unused
0x41 End of light

Light Types

The first value in each light is a type value. These are the possible values:

Type Name
0x0 Local Ambient
0x1 Directional
0x3 Spot
Other Custom

Note that although the game supports point lights, those can't be set through the MREA files; custom lights are used for omnidirectional lights.

Light Functionality

Local Ambient

Ambient lights represent the brightness/color of an area in the absence of any regular lights. There's typically one of these per area; it's not known how they interact if there's more than one. For ambient lights, the color is not used directly; it's multiplied by the Multiplier value and then clamped between 0 and 1, and the result is used as the ambient color.

Directional

Directional lights are lights that have a constant direction for every vertex in the scene. Since GX doesn't have any built-in functions for handling directional lights, the way the game implements this is by taking the light's direction, inverting it, and then multiplying it by 1048576; the result is used as the light's position.

Spot

Spot lights shine in a specific direction from a specific position. Distance attenuation is calculated the same way as with custom lights. For angular attenuation, this is calculated using the spot cutoff parameter. The cutoff value from the file is halved and converted from degrees to radians, and the cosine of the result is calculated. Then the angular attenuation coefficients are calculated as:

(0.0, -CosCutoff / (1.0 - CosCutoff), 1.0 / (1.0 - CosCutoff))

Custom

While the other light types only use a couple of the value to generate lights out of what's essentially a preset setup, custom lights allow for much greater control and customization of the light properties. They're commonly used to represent omnidirectional lights; as such they're by far the most common light type in the game. For attenuation, angular attenuation is set to (1.0, 0.0, 0.0). Distance attenuation is calculated differently depending on the falloff type.

Each falloff type will set one distance attenuation coefficient, with the other two set to 0. For each type:

  • 0: Constant: Coefficient A is set to 2.0 / Multiplier
  • 1: Linear: Coefficient B is set to 250 / Multiplier
  • 2: Quadratic: Coefficient C is set to 25000 / Multiplier