Meyer bragged, “We’re always on the lookout for new technical challenges and we’re really happy with what we’re achieving with our fire effects.” He added, ”It’s not just a static asset – the fire deteriorates the wood realistically and there are blowback effects, like you would expect. The smoke is looking much better this time around.”
Discussing the burning chateau scene that everyone has already seen: ”You could sit down and watch the chateau burn around you, if you sit there long enough. However, we want the player to proceed through the game at a decent pace so that’s not going to happen. Even in this demo, you can see beams deteriorating as they burn, and you can even take cover behind them when they give way and fall to the floor, only for that cover to disappear when the beam has burned away completely.
“Procedural fire is a pretty difficult technical challenge, especially on top of everything else you’re trying to get in the game, but it produces some brilliant effects, like the corners of the wallpaper starting to roll and then igniting, and then the embers flickering in the air. Essentially, we’re programming oxygen and then having the fire follow it around the environment.”
We’ll see if it beats the procedural fire that UbiSoft Montreal created in Far Cry 2.