Mark Lamia Talks Black Ops 2′s Game Engine

Treyarch studio head Mark Lamia sat down with Activision’s Dan “OneOfSwords” Amrich in his latest podcast to talk about Black Ops 2′s engine, among other things.
The top and bottom of it is that Black Ops 2 is using Black Ops’ engine but it has been upgraded to meet the current game’s design goals. You can check out the part of the discussion where Lamia talks about Black Ops 2′s engine below.
People always ask me, “Is this a new engine?” I liken it to people who live in an older house that has been remodeled. Just because you’re remodeling the house and it will look new or it will have a new kitchen, you don’t tear out the foundation, or break out some of the framing. You might even go as hardcore as replacing the plumbing, and we will do that sort of thing, as an analogy. It’s a gross simplification, but it’s one way to say that. There’s a lot of good still in that foundation that you wouldn’t get rid of, and we don’t. We look to advance in the areas that support our game design.
Engines, each time they get touched, they change. The creators alter them; they don’t modify what they don’t need to, and then they alter what they need to. You can’t make a competitive product if you’re not upgrading that engine along the way.
I think the whole thing about a new engine…sometimes that’s a great buzzword. Well, I have a new graphics engine — is that a new engine? Where does it start and stop? Elements of the code, you can trace back for a very very long time…but whole parts of the code are entirely new. Two areas we did focus on for this game were the graphics and the lighting — a pretty significant amount of work is going into that.
I think what people are asking for is for us to push. They want us to make a better-looking game; they want things. I don’t think those are things people can’t ask for. We asked ourselves that very same question — we wanted to advance the graphics. I think the questions are valid. The answer may not need to be an entirely new engine, but you might need to do an entire overhaul of your entire lighting system. The trick is, we’re not willing to do that if we can’t keep it running at 60 frames per second — but we did that this time. So this is the Black Ops II engine.
Source OneOfSwords





3 Comments
The only reason I’m not blaming Treyarch for using the same engine is that we’re nearing the next generation of consoles.
If they’re still making more Call of Duty titles after the next generation’s release and they don’t create a new engine, they’ll lose many customers, for sure.
All in all, I’m glad Treyarch is inching out of their comfort zone with BO2′s premise, though. It’s a smart move, considering how much ridicule Modern Warfare 3 has gotten with extremely little innovation.
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Finally, someone on these forums that agrees with me!
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Why is there not more hardcore games to match what is in core?? I am not impressed that there is only four hardcore playlists. So any chance of getting headquarters, hardpoint, domination and so on ?????
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