Difference between revisions of "Breakpoint"

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Breakpoints are found in 2D games, and they refer how fast animations for attacking, spell casting, hit recovery, and many other things are displayed in frame-based games such as Diablo II.  
 
Breakpoints are found in 2D games, and they refer how fast animations for attacking, spell casting, hit recovery, and many other things are displayed in frame-based games such as Diablo II.  
  
Since Diablo 3 runs in a 3D engine, it does not have literal breakpoints; animations can display however fast or slow the game wishes.  That said, there might be values that must be met in various bonuses for the improvements to become noticeable.
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Since Diablo 3 runs in a 3D engine, it does not have literal breakpoints; animations can display however fast or slow the game wishes.  That said, there might be values that must be met in various bonuses for the improvements to become noticeable, and improvements will likely run into [[diminishing returns]].
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Bashiok spoke on Breakpoints in Diablo III in April 2011.[http://diablo.incgamers.com/blog/comments/blue-on-d3s-breakpoints/]
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<blue>Diablo II animations were rendered at 25 frames per second. This is important because it meant that events could only occur on those 25 points in every second. When you start getting into the nitty gritty of faster attack and cast rates, 25 ticks per second to shave off time for actions to occur isn’t nearly granular enough to account for a direct comparison between point increases and an actual result of removing a full frame. These are called break points. Essentially your attack rate increase points don’t mean anything until you get enough to hit the next break point and remove an animation frame, which would actually result in a real effect on your actions.
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I’ll make two statements on break points:
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# Break points were an effect of the Diablo II engine, not a gameplay mechanic specifically designed into the game.
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# Even modern games run at specific tick rates, and Diablo III is no different. I’ll only say it’s more than 25.
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<font color="#FFFFFF">I believe that wasn’t the point of the post. I think he was suggesting that the minimum gain from any stat that deals with breakpoints only increase based on the lowest break point value, thus eliminating the need to learn break points.
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...If there’s still that very old problem, maybe the items that make no real effect on the attack speed have some asterisk near their AS value? Because this isn’t something that can be “fixed” as far as I’m concerned.</font>
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<br>Well, you could say (for Diablo II) there’s only 24 points of attack speed increase possible to obtain. Each one removes a frame of animation. That’d be pretty clear.
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It’s just not very sexy to chase single digit increases, and tough to itemize, so they’re given some weight and a curve, and it becomes a bit mathier, but a lot more fun to go after. </blue>
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==Breakpoints in Diablo 2==
 
==Breakpoints in Diablo 2==
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In D1 and D2, breakpoints referred to how fast animations for attacking, spell casting, hit recovery, and many other things function in frame-based games such as Diablo II. Since D2 runs at 25 frames per second, various calculations had to be increased to a certain level to show an improvement; incremental changes didn't matter.   
 
In D1 and D2, breakpoints referred to how fast animations for attacking, spell casting, hit recovery, and many other things function in frame-based games such as Diablo II. Since D2 runs at 25 frames per second, various calculations had to be increased to a certain level to show an improvement; incremental changes didn't matter.   
  
For instance, an unmodified D2 Barbarian swung an unmodified one-handed weapon at 7 frames per second. He required 9 [[IAS]] (increased attack speed) to drop down to 6 frames, 20 IAS for 5 frames, 42 IAS for 4 frames, 86 IAS for 3 frames, and 280 IAS for 2 frames. 1 frame was not possible. So a Barbarian at 20-41 IAS was at 5 frames. Not until he reached 42 IAS did the speed of his attack become one frame quicker.
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For instance, it took an unmodified D2 Barbarian 7 frames (meaning 7/25 of a second) to swing an unmodified one-handed weapon. He required 9 [[IAS]] (increased attack speed) to drop down to 6 frames, 20 IAS for 5 frames, 42 IAS for 4 frames, 86 IAS for 3 frames, and 280 IAS for 2 frames. 1 frame was not possible. So a Barbarian at 20-41 IAS was at 5 frames. Not until he reached 42 IAS did the speed of his attack become one frame quicker.
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This sort of thing applied to every character and the pace at which they swing weapons or cast spells, and it always took progressively more increased speed modifiers for each frame of improvement in their actual speed. The slowest base attack was an Amazon with a one-handed weapon, at 17 frames. However that speed could drop all the way to 5 frames with a huge amount (over 480 points) of Increased Attack Speed.
 
* See extensive discussion of {{iw|breakpoint breakpoints}} in the D2 section of this wiki.
 
* See extensive discussion of {{iw|breakpoint breakpoints}} in the D2 section of this wiki.
 
[[category:reference]]
 
 
[[category:combat]]
 
[[category:combat]]

Latest revision as of 19:39, 21 September 2011

Breakpoints are found in 2D games, and they refer how fast animations for attacking, spell casting, hit recovery, and many other things are displayed in frame-based games such as Diablo II.

Since Diablo 3 runs in a 3D engine, it does not have literal breakpoints; animations can display however fast or slow the game wishes. That said, there might be values that must be met in various bonuses for the improvements to become noticeable, and improvements will likely run into diminishing returns.

Bashiok spoke on Breakpoints in Diablo III in April 2011.[1]

Diablo II animations were rendered at 25 frames per second. This is important because it meant that events could only occur on those 25 points in every second. When you start getting into the nitty gritty of faster attack and cast rates, 25 ticks per second to shave off time for actions to occur isn’t nearly granular enough to account for a direct comparison between point increases and an actual result of removing a full frame. These are called break points. Essentially your attack rate increase points don’t mean anything until you get enough to hit the next break point and remove an animation frame, which would actually result in a real effect on your actions.

I’ll make two statements on break points:

  1. Break points were an effect of the Diablo II engine, not a gameplay mechanic specifically designed into the game.
  2. Even modern games run at specific tick rates, and Diablo III is no different. I’ll only say it’s more than 25.


I believe that wasn’t the point of the post. I think he was suggesting that the minimum gain from any stat that deals with breakpoints only increase based on the lowest break point value, thus eliminating the need to learn break points.
...If there’s still that very old problem, maybe the items that make no real effect on the attack speed have some asterisk near their AS value? Because this isn’t something that can be “fixed” as far as I’m concerned.

Well, you could say (for Diablo II) there’s only 24 points of attack speed increase possible to obtain. Each one removes a frame of animation. That’d be pretty clear.

It’s just not very sexy to chase single digit increases, and tough to itemize, so they’re given some weight and a curve, and it becomes a bit mathier, but a lot more fun to go after.


Breakpoints in Diablo 2[edit | edit source]

In D1 and D2, breakpoints referred to how fast animations for attacking, spell casting, hit recovery, and many other things function in frame-based games such as Diablo II. Since D2 runs at 25 frames per second, various calculations had to be increased to a certain level to show an improvement; incremental changes didn't matter.

For instance, it took an unmodified D2 Barbarian 7 frames (meaning 7/25 of a second) to swing an unmodified one-handed weapon. He required 9 IAS (increased attack speed) to drop down to 6 frames, 20 IAS for 5 frames, 42 IAS for 4 frames, 86 IAS for 3 frames, and 280 IAS for 2 frames. 1 frame was not possible. So a Barbarian at 20-41 IAS was at 5 frames. Not until he reached 42 IAS did the speed of his attack become one frame quicker.

This sort of thing applied to every character and the pace at which they swing weapons or cast spells, and it always took progressively more increased speed modifiers for each frame of improvement in their actual speed. The slowest base attack was an Amazon with a one-handed weapon, at 17 frames. However that speed could drop all the way to 5 frames with a huge amount (over 480 points) of Increased Attack Speed.

  • See extensive discussion of breakpoints in the D2 section of this wiki.