Rigs of Rods
Original author(s)Pierre-Michel Ricordel, Thomas Fischer
Developer(s)Petr Ohlidal, Rigs of Rods contributors
Initial release11 August 2005 (2005-08-11)
Stable release
2022.12 / 20 December 2022 (2022-12-20)
Repositorygithub.com/RigsOfRods/rigs-of-rods
Written inC++
EngineOGRE
Operating systemLinux, Microsoft Windows
TypeVehicle simulation game
LicenseGPL-3.0
Websitewww.rigsofrods.org

Rigs of Rods (RoR) is a free and open source[1] vehicle-simulation game which uses soft-body physics to simulate the motion destruction and deformation of vehicles. The game uses a soft-body physics engine to simulate a network of interconnected nodes (forming the chassis and the wheels) and gives the ability to simulate deformable objects. With this engine, vehicles and their loads flex and deform as stresses are applied. Crashing into walls or terrain can permanently deform a vehicle until it is reset; however, not all vehicles in the game have flexible bodies.

Simulation

Beam showing the beams on a DAF Ampliroll
DAF TurboTwin in Rigs of Rods

Rigs of Rods was initially created as an off-road truck simulator, but has developed into a versatile physics sandbox game.

Prior to version 0.28, the game was limited to typical land vehicles with wheels, but plane and boat engines have been added since. All engines allow for a wide range of customization, leaving virtually no boundaries. Vehicles are built using vertices connected by beams. Vertices (or "nodes") are influenced by the stress on the beams that connect them. If a beam is too stressed, it will deform, thus altering the associated nodes position which ultimately alters the appearance and handling of a vehicle. Vehicle configurations are stored in plain text. Simple 2D skins can be made to wrap the vehicle, and can be supplemented with static mesh objects. Recent development has allowed for static meshes to be deformed according to a skeleton of nodes, much like the system in the game 1nsane. This system is known as Flexbody, and has been included since version .36.

The mapping system uses terrain data defined in a raw image file, such as that found in a digital elevation model which can be used to form a realistic surface. Terrains can be made using any other program that can generate a black and white raw image format. This also means that maps can be made from any image.

As a sandbox, Rigs of Rods has no fundamental gameplay goal, but scripting support contributes to missions and game play interaction like the timing of checkpoints along a road or dragstrips. Formerly, Lua was supported as the scripting language and engine, but it has now been replaced by AngelScript[2] since version 0.38. Multiplayer support allows 64 users to simultaneously interact on a playing field.

Critical reception

Physicist Brian Beckman described Rigs of Rods as "one of the best driving simulations I have ever seen."[3][4] Rigs of Rods was featured in PC Gamer UK in the Christmas 2007 edition.[5][6] French magazine MicroSim previewed Rigs of Rods in their June 2008 issue.[7] Rigs of Rods author, Pierre-Michel Ricordel, was invited to talk about the game at the French convention, Libre Software Meeting on July 10, 2009.[8]

Proprietary adaptation

In 2011, some Rigs of Rods developers gathered to write a new proprietary video game called BeamNG.drive using the basics from what they had learned making Rigs of Rods, which they later released as a commercial product.[9]

See also

References

  1. Ricordel, Pierre-Michel (8 February 2009). "Rigs of Rods is going Open Source". Retrieved 8 February 2009.
  2. replaced by AngelScript Archived 2012-03-26 at the Wayback Machine
  3. Dr. Brian Beckman (31 August 2007). Dr. Beckman discusses physics in Rigs of Rods (YouTube). Archived from the original on 14 December 2021.
  4. Brian Beckman: The Physics in Games - Real-Time Simulation Explained, retrieved 4 October 2021
  5. Stone, Tim (December 2007). "Keep on truckin'". PC Gamer UK. Future plc. p. 106.
  6. "Rigs of Rods Blogspot". rigsofrods.blogspot.com. Pierre-Michel Ricordel. 18 December 2007. Retrieved 10 December 2023.
  7. "Rigs of Rods Control of heavy lorries". MicroSim. June 2008.
  8. "Public presentation of RoR".
  9. ign.com: The Most Impressive Physics Engine You’ve Never Seen, retrieved January 12, 2020
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