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Meshes and Models

Overview

Nearly all of the non-geographic visual elements in TR (as well as a few parts of the landscape) consist of as meshes. A mesh is simply a list of vertices and how they’re arranged. The mesh structure includes a list of vertices as relative coordinates (which allows meshes to easily be placed anywhere in the world geometry), a list of normals (to indicate which side of each face is visible), and lists of Rectangles and Triangles, both textured and coloured. The elements of each [tr_face4] or [tr_face3] (or same version-specific) structure (Rectangles and Triangles) contain an offset into the Vertices[] array for the mesh. Other arrays (Entities[], StaticMeshes[]) do not reference the array Meshes[] directly, but instead reference the array MeshPointers[], which points to locations inside of Meshes[], inside of which the meshes are stored in packed fashion.

Tip

Pointer indexing system allows engine to share same mesh for numerous different models, and also easily implement a feature called meshswap — used when a puzzle is inserted into a hole, when Lara draws pistols, and so on.

While it may be not obvious, but every time you see mesh look is changed, it means that meshswap happened. There was never any other way to modify mesh looks in classic TRs.

Meshes

The sign of the number of normals specifies which sort of lighting to use. If the sign is positive, then external vertex lighting is used, with the lighting calculated from the room’s ambient and point-source lighting values. The latter appears to use a simple Lambert law for directionality: intensity is proportional to \(\max(\langle (\mathrm{normal direction}), (\mathrm{direction to source}) \rangle, 0)\). If the sign is negative, then internal vertex lighting is used, using the data included with the mesh.

Note
This is not a `real'' C/C++ structure, in that the arrays are sized by the `NumXXX elements that precede them.
virtual struct tr_mesh // (variable length)
{
    tr_vertex Centre;
      int32_t CollRadius;

      int16_t NumVertices;           // Number of vertices in this mesh
    tr_vertex Vertices[NumVertices]; // List of vertices (relative coordinates)

      int16_t NumNormals;

  if(NumNormals > 0)
    tr_vertex Normals[NumNormals];
  else
      int16_t Lights[abs(NumNormals)];

     int16_t NumTexturedRectangles; // number of textured rectangles in this mesh
    tr_face4 TexturedRectangles[NumTexturedRectangles]; // list of textured rectangles

     int16_t NumTexturedTriangles;  // number of textured triangles in this mesh
    tr_face3 TexturedTriangles[NumTexturedTriangles]; // list of textured triangles

     int16_t NumColouredRectangles; // number of coloured rectangles in this mesh
    tr_face4 ColouredRectangles[NumColouredRectangles]; // list of coloured rectangles

     int16_t NumColouredTriangles; // number of coloured triangles in this mesh
    tr_face3 ColouredTriangles[NumColouredTriangles]; // list of coloured triangles
};

Centre is usually close to the mesh’s centroid, and appears to be the center of a sphere used for certain kinds of collision testing.

CollRadius appears to be the radius of that aforementioned collisional sphere.

NumNormals: If positive, it is a number of normals in this mesh. If negative, it is a number of vertex lighting elements (abs value).

Depending on a value of NumNormals, next data block is interpreted either as Normals[] array (in [tr_vertex] format) or Lights array (just standard int16_t values).

NumTexturedTriangles and NumTexturedRectangles are respectively the number of triangular and rectangular faces in this mesh. Corresponding TexturedTriangles and TexturedRectangles array contain textured triangles and rectangles themselves.

NumColoredTriangles and NumColoredRectangles are respectively the number of triangular and rectangular faces in this mesh. Corresponding ColoredTriangles and ColoredRectangles array contain colored triangles and rectangles themselves.

As coloured faces feature was removed since TR4, [tr_mesh] structure was changed, and contain no data for coloured faces anymore:

virtual struct tr4_mesh // (variable length)
{
    tr_vertex Centre;
      int32_t CollRadius;

      int16_t NumVertices;           // Number of vertices in this mesh
    tr_vertex Vertices[NumVertices]; // List of vertices (relative coordinates)

      int16_t NumNormals;

  if(NumNormals > 0)
    tr_vertex Normals[NumNormals];
  else
      int16_t Lights[abs(NumNormals)];

     int16_t NumTexturedRectangles; // number of textured rectangles in this mesh
    tr_face4 TexturedRectangles[NumTexturedRectangles]; // list of textured rectangles

     int16_t NumTexturedTriangles;  // number of textured triangles in this mesh
    tr_face3 TexturedTriangles[NumTexturedTriangles]; // list of textured triangles
};

Static Meshes

As the name tells, static meshes are meshes that don’t move (e.g. skeletons lying on the floor, spiderwebs, trees, statues, etc.) Usually it implies that static mesh is completely non-interactive, i.e. all it does is sitting there in place serving as an ornament.

Note
{TR4}{TR5} Since TR4, certain static meshes became destroyable (either by shooting or exploding them), and even gained ability to activate heavy triggers. Such static meshes are called shatters. Engine tells shatter statics from ordinary ones judging by their IDs, i.e. shatter static mesh must be in a specific slot. This behaviour is hardcoded.

StaticMeshes have two bounding boxes. First one serves as visibililty box, and other is the collisional box. The former is being used for visibility testing, and the latter is used for collision testing.

struct tr_staticmesh   // 32 bytes
{
    uint32_t        ID;   // Static Mesh Identifier
    uint16_t        Mesh; // Mesh (offset into MeshPointers[])
    tr_bounding_box VisibilityBox;
    tr_bounding_box CollisionBox;
    uint16_t        Flags;
};
struct tr_bounding_box // 12 bytes
{
    int16_t MinX, MaxX, MinY, MaxY, MinZ, MaxZ;
};

VisibilityBox and CollisionBox boundaries is always stay axis aligned even after applying tr_room_staticmesh::Rotation (always have 90 degrees step). Additionally, the test whether to rotate the box or not relies on the mesh’s rotation being an exact multiple of 0x4000 (aka 90 degrees). If this is not the case, the box is not rotated, which results in wrong collision checks.

{TR1}{TR2} In Flags field, bit 1 is usually set, which means static mesh is visible. Bit 0 is also set for static meshes without collision, like plants and lying skeletons. Since TR3, value is ignored, and no-collision mode is obtained using degenerate collision box (with all-zero or all-one coordinates).

Models

This defines a list of contiguous meshes that comprise one object, which is called a model. This structure also points to the hierarchy and offsets of the meshes (MeshTree), and also to the animations used (Animation); these will be described in detail below. If the Animation index is -1, that means that there are no predefined animations, and entity’s movement is all generated by the engine; an example is Lara’s ponytail or rolling balls from TR4 and TR5.

Some entities are really stationary, such as locks and the skybox, and some are not rendered at all, such as ``camera target'' points to aim the camera at, flame emitters, AI objects and other service entities. Such invisible models are frequently called nullmeshes, because usually they have null mesh index specified for them, and never actually use it.

{TR1}{TR2} Sometimes, model may refer to sprite or sprite sequence to draw itself (for example, pick-up items and flame emitters). In this case, model is replaced with sprite in run-time. This behaviour is hardcoded for specific model IDs.

{TR4}{TR5} Sometimes, model may have two different versions defined in level files — one is normal, and another is low-detailed one, with the latter used when camera position gets too far from them. These are called MIP models, and mostly exist for NPCs (enemies). Usually, their type IDs are one off their normal counterparts (for example, skeleton type ID in TR4 is 35, and its MIP variation is 36).

struct tr_model  // 18 bytes
{
    uint32_t ID;           // Type Identifier (matched in Entities[])
    uint16_t NumMeshes;    // Number of meshes in this object
    uint16_t StartingMesh; // Stating mesh (offset into MeshPointers[])
    uint32_t MeshTree;     // Offset into MeshTree[]
    uint32_t FrameOffset;  // Byte offset into Frames[] (divide by 2 for Frames[i])
    uint16_t Animation;    // Offset into Animations[]
};

{TR5} There is an extra uint16_t at the end of [tr_model] structure, which is always 0xFFEF and used for alignment. Consider it while parsing.

Entities

Entities are the actual instances of entity types, consisting either of models or sprites (with the latter existing in TR1-2 only). For an entity to appear in a level, it must be referenced in the Models[] array. Multiple instances of the same model are possible (e.g. two identical tigers in different rooms are represented using two entries in Entities[], one for each).

Entity structure has gone through different variations across game versions, so we’ll list them all.

TR1 Entity Structure

struct tr_entity // 22 bytes
{
    int16_t TypeID;     // Entity type ID (matched in Models[])
    int16_t Room;
    int32_t x;          // Item position in world coordinates
    int32_t y;
    int32_t z;
    int16_t Angle;
    int16_t Intensity1;
    uint16_t Flags;
};

TR2-3 Entity Structure

struct tr2_entity // 24 bytes
{
    int16_t TypeID;
    int16_t Room;
    int32_t x;
    int32_t y;
    int32_t z;
    int16_t Angle;
    int16_t Intensity1;
    int16_t Intensity2; // Like Intensity1, and almost always with the same value.
    uint16_t Flags;
};

TR4-5 Entity Structure

struct tr4_entity // 24 bytes
{
    int16_t TypeID;
    int16_t Room;
    int32_t x;
    int32_t y;
    int32_t z;
    int16_t Angle;
    int16_t Intensity1;
    int16_t OCB;        // Replaces Intensity2, see further for explanations.
    uint16_t Flags;
};

TypeID is used to assign appropriate action for this entity and/or locate the appropriate sprite sequence or model to draw. If TypeID is zero, it means it’s playable character (i.e. Lara).

Room is a room ID to which this particular entity belongs to. If room value was modified incorrectly, entity will glitch and, most likely, won’t appear in engine. That is, you can’t change entity position without complementary edit or Room field.

Angle is an Euler Yaw angle (i.e. ``horizontal'' rotation) stored in a special manner. To convert it to ordinary degrees, use this formula:

\(\angle^\circ = (Angle \div 16384) \times -90\)

{TR1} Intensity2 field is missing in this game version, so the structure size is 2 bytes less.

Intensity1: If not -1, it is a value of constant lighting. -1 means ``use mesh lighting''.

Flags value contain packed list of several parameters:

  • Bit 7 (0x0080) — {TR1}{TR2}{TR3} Clear Body flag. It is used together with Clear Bodies trigger action to remove the body of dead enemy from the level to conserve resources.

  • Bit 8 (0x0100) — Invisible flag. If entity has this flag set, it will be invisible on start-up. However, it only works for specific types of entities. It is primarily used with pick-ups or other entities which should appear at certain point only after activation, but are visible by default.

  • Bits 9..13 (0x3E00) — Activation Mask for this entity. As you already learned in Trigger Actions chapter, entity is only activated when activation mask is all set (i.e. all 5 bits are set, and value is 0x1F). However, activation mask doesn’t strictly required to be set by trigger — level editor allows to pre-define activation mask, so entity will bear specific activation mask layout on level start-up.

If activation mask was pre-set to 0x1F (all set), entity will activate immediately after level loading, and engine will also reset activation mask to zero and mark entity as inactive, effectively swapping inactive'' state with active''. That is, when player will activate such pre-activated entity with a trigger, it will actually ``deactivate'', et cetera. Most prominent example of this behaviour is pre-opened grated door in Tomb of Qualopec.

Object Code Bit

In TR4 and TR5, Intensity2 field was replaced with completely new one, called Object Code Bit (or OCB). OCB allows to alter entity behaviour based on its value, thus providing very basic ``script-like'' functionality. For example, flame emitter entities have a case switch for OCB value, and each valid OCB value produces different result — flame emttier acts either as a static flame, as a directional flame, as a lightning, and so on.

More detailed description of OCB is provided in this section.

Sprites

These are billboard'' objects that are always rendered perpendicular to the view direction. These are used for text and explosion effects and similar things; they are also used for some scenery objects and pickup items, though this use gets less as one goes from TR1 to TR3. The various Sides'' below are the positions of the sprite sides relative to the sprite’s overall position, measured in TR’s world-coordinate units.

struct tr_sprite_texture   // 16 bytes
{
    uint16_t Tile;
     uint8_t x;
     uint8_t y;
    uint16_t Width;        // (ActualWidth  * 256) + 255
    uint16_t Height;       // (ActualHeight * 256) + 255
     int16_t LeftSide;
     int16_t TopSide;
     int16_t RightSide;
     int16_t BottomSide;
};

{TR4}{TR5} x and y values are not used in this version. Additionally, formula for Width and Height is changed: now it’s (ActualWidth - 1) * 256 and (ActualHeight - 1) * 256 respectively.

Sprite Sequences

These are collections of sprites that are referred to as a group. The members of this group can be cycled through (animated sprites such as flames, blood splats or explosions) or selected in other ways (text). Some sequences have only one member; this is done so as to access all the sprites in the same way.

struct tr_sprite_sequence  // 8 bytes
{
    int32_t SpriteID;       // Sprite identifier
    int16_t NegativeLength; // Negative of ``how many sprites are in this sequence''
    int16_t Offset;         // Where (in sprite texture list) this sequence starts
};