First of all, you should use the camera parts to take pictures. This is because the default viewpoint will always show the aircraft in the center, and the image will not look the same. However, with the camera parts, you can use pistons and detachers to move the viewpoint itself, which will bring a change to the screen.
As for the controls, there is no pilot school in SimplePlanes. In my case, I set the game mode to Slow when shooting, which allows for fine control of the aircraft and smooth movement of the plane.
If I could say anything else, airplane music videos and the appearance of airplanes in movies may be helpful as references for your video. Also, considering the short duration of the video, movie trailers and teasers are good to use as a reference.
@1918 Okay, thanks for that. But do you have any recommendations for how to use the cameras? I'm new to this and limited with the programs I am using (I'm on a windows 10 computer.)
Also, know of some kind of SimplePlanes pilot school I could go to?
(Any other feed back is welcome, thank you a lot for the feed back that you gave me, I'll see if I can make some changes.)
Some things to note though, is that Youtube messes with the quality of my videos, in the editor program I use, the video quality is very nice, but youtube pixelates the crap out of it, but will sometimes get it right, any tricks on how to fix that?
One thing that can be said is that the camera work is generally monotonous.
Monotonous images can be effective if you choose to use them, but if they become the majority of your video, it becomes boring.
Monotonous camerawork in this case means that the video is shot entirely in Orbit camera mode. In other words, no matter what kind of airplane or what kind of scene, the airplane in the center of the screen makes the screen monotonous and boring.
In order to improve this situation, it is effective to interweave camera work such as taking images from the cockpit or a part of the plane instead of the whole plane, or taking images of the plane from the ground.
In addition to this, the operation of the aircraft is also noticeably poor.
In other words, there is a blurring of motion that can be seen at various points in the aircraft's movements, and the aircraft's behavior is not smooth. As a result, the video loses its realism and becomes somewhat cheap, as if it were a copy of a toy.
I'm sorry to be so harsh, but I think that if you improve the above two points, the camera work in the video and the aircraft operation, your work will be dramatically better.
@TheNightmareCompany
@TheNightmareCompany ok
I don't mind.@TheNightmareCompany
@1918 Okay, good point, May I pin you for my next video, I like your feed back and it will help my quality a lot.
First of all, you should use the camera parts to take pictures. This is because the default viewpoint will always show the aircraft in the center, and the image will not look the same. However, with the camera parts, you can use pistons and detachers to move the viewpoint itself, which will bring a change to the screen.
As for the controls, there is no pilot school in SimplePlanes. In my case, I set the game mode to Slow when shooting, which allows for fine control of the aircraft and smooth movement of the plane.
If I could say anything else, airplane music videos and the appearance of airplanes in movies may be helpful as references for your video. Also, considering the short duration of the video, movie trailers and teasers are good to use as a reference.
That's about all I can say.
@TheNightmareCompany
Cool
@1918 Okay, thanks for that. But do you have any recommendations for how to use the cameras? I'm new to this and limited with the programs I am using (I'm on a windows 10 computer.)
Also, know of some kind of SimplePlanes pilot school I could go to?
(Any other feed back is welcome, thank you a lot for the feed back that you gave me, I'll see if I can make some changes.)
Some things to note though, is that Youtube messes with the quality of my videos, in the editor program I use, the video quality is very nice, but youtube pixelates the crap out of it, but will sometimes get it right, any tricks on how to fix that?
One thing that can be said is that the camera work is generally monotonous.
Monotonous images can be effective if you choose to use them, but if they become the majority of your video, it becomes boring.
Monotonous camerawork in this case means that the video is shot entirely in Orbit camera mode. In other words, no matter what kind of airplane or what kind of scene, the airplane in the center of the screen makes the screen monotonous and boring.
In order to improve this situation, it is effective to interweave camera work such as taking images from the cockpit or a part of the plane instead of the whole plane, or taking images of the plane from the ground.
In addition to this, the operation of the aircraft is also noticeably poor.
In other words, there is a blurring of motion that can be seen at various points in the aircraft's movements, and the aircraft's behavior is not smooth. As a result, the video loses its realism and becomes somewhat cheap, as if it were a copy of a toy.
I'm sorry to be so harsh, but I think that if you improve the above two points, the camera work in the video and the aircraft operation, your work will be dramatically better.
@TheNightmareCompany
@comradelmo64 There was only so much I could show with three creations, also, this video is just to tease what I got done so far.
I really like it but I think you should not repeat showing the same creation but other than that I think it is perfect I also really liked the music
@1918 Is this a good quality video? (I like your videos so I thought you would be a good critic for this video)