Ramiel Vs Eva-01

  • Videogamer555
    2nd Nov 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    Check out this anime inspired battle scene.



    Just run it and watch as Evangelion Unit 01 gets toasted real quick.


  • MasterMind555
    2nd Nov 2011 Member 0 Permalink

    Videogamer555:

    gets toasted real quick.
    At 3 FPS


  • cctvdude99
    2nd Nov 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    @MasterMind555 (View Post)
    I get 6-7 FPS. :P

    @Videogamer555 (View Post)
    Yep, 'cause elements moving at 3 pixels/frame at 3-7 FPS is "toasted real quick", isn't it?
    And even if it was going at above 7 FPS, it would still not get "toasted real quick"...
  • Vou-II
    2nd Nov 2011 Banned 0 Permalink
    This post is hidden because the user is banned
  • EqualsThree
    2nd Nov 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    9 ish FPS <.<
  • Ozonerx
    2nd Nov 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    @Videogamer555 (View Post)
    You need to polish it alot. And if I'm not wrong unit 00 helped him with a shield, so the damage was more dealt to eva-00 more than 01...
  • Videogamer555
    2nd Nov 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    Your statement is correct only regarding the SECOND battle. I said the FIRST battle. As you may recall they sent him out one time BEFORE Eva-00 was there to protect him, and what happened here is about what happened in that battle (only in the anime the beam didn't go right through him, but caused heavy damage to the front armor).

    Also why the -2 points on it. At least I tried on this one. It's my first EVER attempt to use the decorations layer. I think I'd get some +points for TRYING at least. SHEESH!
  • cctvdude99
    2nd Nov 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    @Videogamer555 (View Post)
    I doubt people downvoted because of the decorations. They are quite neat, but maybe you need more detail.
  • Videogamer555
    2nd Nov 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    This is what it's supposed to look like.


    Yeah its slow in TPT because all those NEUT flying around. But I managed to capture what it was supposed to look like.
    I used AnimGet software to record the screen (it automatically records a bmp file whenever the screen changes).
    I then used VDub to create an AVI file of it. I used the Cinepak codec as it seems to have come with Windows and has decent compression and decent quality. I set it to speed up the video to 240fps (at which point it looks like I thought it should) and then set it to drop frames to bring it back to 30fps while keeping the same visual speed. Also I converted it to 712x480 size (this keeps the aspect ratio while making sure that the vertical size is exactly 480). This is needed for Youtube or else if even a few pixels less height than 480 it automatically DOWNCONVERTS the video to 360p (so the above mentioned step is needed to keep the video at 480p quality on Youtbe). I uploaded the resulting AVI file to Youtube.