Concerning Exterior Views and Trains Made for OpenBVE

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Pacific385:

Quote from: pjiang6211 on March 07, 2010, 02:21:42 PM
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I honestly agree with coney as well. There are lots of work I have seen, and some of them could have been worked on instead of releasing it as plain as it looks.

Dumb4life, take this any way you want, but to me what coney and I are doing is merely constructive criticism. The panel could really use some work, and you don't have to do it on your own. Why, my phone camera can't take the ends of cars really well, so Kawasaki was willing to help me snap the end of the cars with his camera. The point is, true, we've seen panels better than what you have right now, but if you can't do it you could always ask for help. It's nice to see one person make a whole trainset, but it's also nice to see many people collaborate on a trainset as well!

I made new b3d train files to replace the old static trains that we have in BVEStation as a start to making my HQ trainsets. Plus, I'm really taking my time taking pictures, my trainsets, and whatnot, which is why I haven't posted progress yet, and probably won't be for the next few months. I have yet to back my words with proof because at this time my trains do look like crap, but when my trains become of high quality I will be showing it.

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I appreciate your criticism and all the sets need work here and there. And as of now, the panel isn't done yet.
However, I will definitely (planned before this topic was started) ask for help and also ask what I should put and what I should take out. Your Strategy makes sense, pjiang6211 , Once the R68 I'm making gets high quality, i'll then show it.

rayv145:

Finally somebody else see's where I'm coming from! I actually have an idea for a totally new QA system I'll share with the staff later.

And for all of the train developers out there: you can't be satisfied for nice or looks good. You have to be amazed with your own work, cause if you aren't then there's no guarantee that anybody else will be. I've seen potential in some of the train developers here, but you guys stop too early. If you really enjoy developing trains, put more effort into it. I'm not going to use anything I've made as an example, but I can honestly say at the least I work with the intention of making it very hard to outdo myself.

coneykidw8:

A good train IMHO takes months, not days or weeks.

ipaclansite:

In my opinion, time doesn't measure quality.  Its what is done with that time, and what the end result looks like.  If the end result exceeds what you expected it to be, then you've done your job, even if it did take a few weeks to do.  For days I'm skeptical, unless its fictional, but you get what I'm trying to say hopefully.

error46146:

Quote from: coneykidw8 on March 08, 2010, 03:08:43 PM
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A good train IMHO takes months, not days or weeks.

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Perfection takes time. It took me almost two years to release my R160 Siemens train, and even still now I am not completely satisfied with it. Slow down, take your time to work everything out there is no race or contest over who finishes first; the contest is rather who makes the best one.

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