As was pointed out: "That said, there is one minor problem - different game artstyles can constitute whether Bloom is turned on, which tonemap is used, etc. For example, when playing Doom, I like having my bloom on, but if I am going to start playing the Adventures of Square, the art style and bloom don't mix, in my opinion. For this, I have to remember to switch my bloom settings every time I switch IWad"
- allow recursive linking of $random definitions (as long as they do not link back, see above.)
- fixed the sound precaching which did not handle $alias inside $random. Normally this went undetected but in cases where the random sound index was the same as a sound index in the current link chain this could hang the function.
- check and use WGL_EXT_swap_control_tear extension. The above change makes the system always wait for a full vsync with a wglSwapInterval of 1, so it now uses the official extension that enables adaptive vsync. Hopefully this also works on the cards where the old setup did not.
The slot had been there forever to address this same problem but only one of the two constructors actually set it, too bad that it was the wrong one...
This is something that normally won't be noticed. But if some actor is spawned on a moving platform, with both thinkers on the same statnum it means that the order of execution is not correct with the platform being done first, resulting in the actor to 'jump' while the platform is moving. To prevent this it is necessary that all sector movers only tick after all actors have completed their thinking turn.
We have to be extremely careful with the player data, because there's just too much code littered around that has certain expectations about what needs to be present and what not.
Obviously, when travelling in a hub, the player_t should be retained from the previous level. But we still have to set player_t::mo to the PlayerPawn from the savegame so that G_UnsnapshotLevel doesn't prematurely delete it and all associated voodoo dolls, because it checks player_t::mo to decide whether a player is valid or not.
The actual deletion of this redundant PlayerPawn should only be done in G_FinishTravel, after the actual player has been fully set up
* do not skip the player_t init when travelling in a hub. The old player may still be needed in some edge cases. This applies only to singleplayer for now. The multiplayer version still needs reviewing. I left it alone because it may shuffle players around which is not wanted when doing hub travelling.
* do not spawn two temp players in G_FinishTravel. Instead handle the case where no player_t::mo can be found gracefully by adding a few nullptr checks. This temp player served no real purpose except for having a valid pointer. The actual start position was retrieved from somewhere else.