(29-11-2019, 04:05 PM)neonDog Wrote: It isn't as bad as I remembered it being. It is just the left and right sides of the screen that have some drawing issues.
His CPU and card are good, but not top of the line (6700K with GTX 1080).
In Rift (any many other earlier VR devices), when you look around fast, the last frame is freezed in place until the new one is rendered. During that time, you can see "outside" the frame if you peek at the corner of the eyes, and what's there it's of course black (as the device hasn't rendered anything there). The higher the fps, the smaller these black bands. But they're always there. Thankfully in the device they pass mostly unnoticed because your eyes spend most of the time looking forward. Not so much when rendered to a screen, where you can see them clearly. I don't think this is Obi's fault, seen it happen in many VR games.
Also that video is of a quite old version, where particle anisotropy hadn't been added yet and everything looked like small spheres
(29-11-2019, 04:05 PM)neonDog Wrote: I'm not sure what other methods are available aside from screen-space ellipsiod, but solely for VR usage there must be something more efficient that could be considered?
Most realtime fluid rendering methods are screen-space, as the possible alternatives involve some form of isosurface extraction (like marching cubes, which is slow, even in GPU). Of the screen-space methods, ellipsoid splatting is the most advanced (and better looking) one. So not many viable alternatives sadly. We will try to get single stereo working in the future though, but it's hard to say when (and if) it will be available.