This makes OpenGL stop using a specific function that doesn't really do anything for it anymore. It looks like it was used for a hack that would change the colour of polygons for the flashpal equivalent in DOOM.
I made it so ST_DoPaletteStuff doesn't set the flashpal in OpenGL as it already does its own hacky overlay and doing that would cause all the textures to be flushed more mid-level, it could be enabled for more correct flashpals, but they still wouldn't effect fog or lighting.
This means the palette will be set when going to the title screen, and twice when starting a map, (causing the OpenGL cached textures to also be flushed at those times)
This means that, if the three paths are not the same, you should be able to tell if at least one of them has a file that just had a bad MD5. Most relevant for Linux peeps I expect.
Note: Untested as of writing
I don't fully understand this, but it's what software does and it fixes the issue of the lighting in DSZ3. Also don't need the extra call to R_Prep3DFloors.
I don't think it does anything for us anymore, and might even break things with slopes.
Someone let me know if I'm wrong and am breaking things horribly here.
Transformation based on screen space would make sense if we didn't want anything in the world to effect the sprites.
This should allow sprite splitting and sorting of sprites with level geometry easier.
stransform is no longer needed.
Solid walls *can* be cut
Fix issues with water and fog FOFs not cutting each other out correctly
Fix Fog colourmap and lighting setting that is done here.
Remove HWR_SplitFog
There is currently a bug with FF_DOUBLESHADOW (that also exists in software) but has a larger impact here. When 2 FF_DOUBLESHADOW lights are directly stacked on each other the bottom one has its height set incorrectly. This causes all the Fog in the timed gravity flipping section of ERZ2 to be drawn and it looks really bad.
This reverts commit 121fcd8369.
The reason I am reverting this is because the last commit actually fixes the *old* screenshot functionality, as the screen is being drawn back onto the buffer after they're swapped in the "real" size. Meaning the old function actually works perfectly fine now.
They still aren't perfect, but now they are at least not quite so obviously just translucent polygons over the level. A mixture between partially modulating the background colours and adding the fog colour. Notably white fog blocks look like they're brightening what's behind them.
Additive was also setting noalphatest before, can probably decide that depending on what it needs anyway. I don't think it's currently used anyway.