SilentObserver, on 14 February 2012 - 12:02 PM, said:
If you want to look out the right window, i would turn my head to the right. If i was in a mech, i would see out the right window (or the side of my hunchbacks AC20). In my office i would see my bookself. Because the monitor doesn't move with my head. So does the headtracker exagerate your head movement so you move your head a little to the right, while keeping your eyes on the screen, and the image pans much farther to the right?
I'm curious what that would do to the aiming reticle(s), would it stay in the middle of the screen while you head panned, would it stay fixed to torso so you could "free look?"
Conceptually I like the idea a lot but i'm struggling with how it would work.
TrackIR can be configured in a variety of ways - You can set it up to make the in-cockpit camera 1:1 with where your head is pointed, or it can effectively act like a big joystick. The software is very flexible.
A feature I doubt they'd implement, but would be really cool to see, would be locking onto targets by looking at them. Some real life fighter aircraft actually have systems that work like this, though I assume Piranha wouldn't change the reticle system for TrackIR users.
Edited by Orayn, 14 February 2012 - 12:24 PM.