Messing around in Outerra Anteword and this came into being.

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Messing around in Outerra Anteword and this came into being.
Outerra - Full Scale Procedural Planet Earth
i mean it’s a little lacking in the Buildings Department (there should be an abandoned AFB here lmao) but still super duper cool
Adda Kaleh - EX
Since gaming in the 80's one question has always crossed my mind, why can't game developers combine genres? Why can't a driving simulator work in the same world as a flight simulator in the same world a war strategy simulator? Then in the 90's this idea became more widely asked with the added question, why can't a FPS also be added to this list as well as RPG's and Mech Warrior?
Surprisingly the answer was not "because pc's can't handle it" rather because no one could be bothered creating such a world.
Well, now, that holistic idea is almost a reality thanks to creations such as Outerra. This idea has been tested before in such games as BF4, but the sad reality is that while it's a good FPS the flight simulator community consider it a joke when it comes to flying craft.
With enough development, and maintaining the right focus, Outerra could be a game engine platform for the near future of single and multiplayer gaming.
EXQUISITE MIDDLE-EARTH-FROM-SPACE IMAGES Travel to the land of hobbits and wizards, elves and orcs!
Created by Outerra, using the M-E digital elevation model | Underwire February 4, 2014 at WIRED
JRR Tolkien’s Middle-earth is still the undisputed champ of fantasy worlds beloved by cartographers. Several projects over the years have tried to map the land of Lord of the Rings—some great, some unrealized. Now, however, two of them together have gone beyond simple drawings and created a set of stunning renders.
Outerra, based in Slovakia, has created a “3D planetary engine” that purports to be able to render a world in full detail, from space all the way down to pebbles on the surface.
Steve Edwards and Carl Lingard started the ME-DEM (Middle-earth Digital Elevation Model) Project in 2006, with the ultimate goal of rendering the entirety of Middle-earth in open-source data. Last year, they exported their data into the Outerra engine.
IMAGES
Middle Earth: seen from space—with labels
Middle Earth: Frodo's journey traced in red
Mountains of Mordor
Erebor: the Lonely Mountain
Mountains of Minas Tirith
Revised