Weismart Discussion started by Weismart 4 years ago
Then there are the reflections on the court and this is a place where tried and tested tech wins the afternoon. According to what I'm seeing, I believe the game uses planar reflections as opposed to ray-traced or SSR reflections.
Planar reflections continue to be useful when applied to one plane like the courtroom but they're not as elastic in a more intricate game world. In cases like this, the expression is altered by shaders used on the wood floors to correctly distort what you see. The quality and resolution of the reflection appear enhanced on next-gen versus past. It's even more convincing and thoroughly realistic.

The nature of planar reflections also suggests that items could be perfectly reproduced and reflections can intersect with no difficulty. The backboard also receives mirror-like reflections which reveal both the hoop itself as well as also the ball while the internet receives fine physics since you jam the ball . None of these features are new to the next-gen version but everything feels more elegant overall.

None of the re-invents the wheel, but would make the game far better than NBA 2K20, which I enjoyed, but a game which accomplishes most of these goals is acceptable from the current scenario, and worth the investment for people who are hardcore 2K players. A massive part of the entire NBA 2K21 adventure is building your own player which you can use during the game's campaign, the MyCareer manner, as well as the currency-earning Neighborhood facet of the sport, too.

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