First steps with Rooms and Portals

The RoomManager

Anytime you want to use the portal system, you need to include a special node in your scene tree, called the RoomManager. The RoomManager is responsible for the runtime maintenance of the system, especially converting the objects in your rooms into a room graph which is used at runtime to perform occlusion culling and other tasks.

Room Conversion

This conversion must take place every time you want to activate the system. It does not store the room graph in your project (for flexibility and to save memory). You can either trigger it by pressing the Convert Rooms button in the editor toolbar (which also has a keyboard shortcut), or you can call the rooms_convert() method in the RoomManager. This latter method will be what you use in-game. Note that for safety, best practice is to call rooms_clear() before unloading or changing levels.

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If you convert the level while the editor is running, the portal culling system will take over from the normal Godot frustum culling. This may affect some editor features. For this reason, you can turn the portal culling on and off, using either the View Portal Culling toggle in the View menu on the editor toolbar (which also has a keyboard shortcut), or via the Active setting in the RoomManager node.

Note

To use the RoomManager, you have to tell it where the rooms are in your scene tree, or rather where the RoomList node is. This RoomList is the parent of your rooms - see below. If the RoomList is not set, conversion will fail, and you will see a warning dialog box.

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The RoomList

Before we create any rooms, we must first create a node to be the parent of all the static objects, rooms, roomgroups and so on in our level. This node is referred to as the the RoomList.

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Note

The roomlist is not a special node type, it can just be a regular Spatial.

You will need to assign the roomlist node in the RoomManager, so the RoomManager knows where to find the rooms.

Why do we use a specific branch of the scene tree, and not use the scene root? The answer is that there are many internal details of the system which are easier to manage if the rooms are placed on their own branch.

Often, you will end up completely replacing the roomlist branch at runtime in your game as you load and unload levels.

Rooms

What is a room?

Rooms are a way of spatially partitioning your level into areas that make sense in terms of the level design. Rooms often quite literally are rooms (for instance in a building). Ultimately though, as far as the engine is concerned, a room respresents a non-overlapping convex volume, in which you would typically place most of your objects that fall within that area.

A room doesn’t need to correspond to a literal room. It could for example also be a canyon in an outdoor area, or a smaller part of a concave room. With a little imagination, you can use the system in almost any scenario.

Why convex?

The reason why rooms are defined as convex volumes (or convex hulls as they are known), is that mathematically, it is very easy to determine whether a point is within a convex hull. A simple plane check will tell you the distance of a point from a plane. If a point is behind all the planes bounding the convex hull, then by definition, it is inside the room. This makes all kinds of things easier in the internals of the system, such as checking which room a camera is within.

A convex hull. The hull is defined as a series of planes facing outward. If a point is behind all the planes, it is within the hull.

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Why non-overlapping?

If two rooms overlap, and a camera or player is in this overlapping zone, then there is no way to tell which room the object should be in (and hence render from), or be rendered in. This requirement for non-overlapping rooms does have implications for level design.

If you accidentally create overlapping rooms, the editor will flag a warning when you convert the rooms, and indicate any overlapping zones in red.

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The system does attempt to cope with overlapping rooms as best as possible by making the current room “sticky”. Each object remembers which room it was in last frame, and stays within it as long as it does not move outside the convex hull room bound. This can result in some hysteresis in these overlapping zones.

There is one exception however for internal rooms. You do not have to worry about these to start with.

How do I create a room?

A Room is a node type that can be added to the scene tree like any other. You can place objects within the room by making them children and grand-children of the Room node.

How do I define the shape and position of my room convex hull?

Because defining the room bound is the most important aspect of the system, there are THREE methods available to define the shape of a room in Godot:

  1. Use the geometry of the objects contained within the room to automatically create an approximate bound.

  2. By manually editing the points that define the convex hull, in the room inspector, or dragging the points using the editor gizmo (see Room point editing).

  3. Provide a manual bound. This is a MeshInstance in the room that has geometry in the shape of the desired bound, with a name with a postfix -bound. This is something you might choose to do if you create your levels in Blender or similar (see Creating room systems in Blender (or other modeling tools)).

While the first option can be all that is required, particularly with simple rooms, or for pre-production, the power of the manual bounds gives you ultimate control (at the expense of a small amount of editing). You can also combine the two approaches, perhaps using automatic bounds for most rooms but manually editing problem areas.

The automatic method is used whenever a manual bound is not supplied.

A simple pair of rooms. The portal margin is shown with translucent red, and the room hulls are shown with green wireframe.

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Portals

If you create some rooms, place objects within them, then convert the level in the editor, you will see the objects in the rooms appearing and showing as you move between rooms. There is one problem however! Although you can see the objects within the room that the camera is in, you can’t see to any neighbouring rooms! For that we need portals.

Portals are special convex polygons. You position over the openings between rooms, in order to allow the system to see between them. You can create a portal node directly in the editor. The default portal has 4 points and behaves much like a plane MeshInstance. You can add or remove points using the inspector. A portal will require at least 3 points to work - this is because it needs to form a polygon rather than a point or line.

To save editing effort, only one Portal is required between each pair of Rooms. You do not need to (and indeed should not) create two Portals that overlap in opposite directions. Portals default to being two-way (but you can make them one-way in the Portal inspector).

You should therefore place a portal in only one of each pair of neighbouring rooms - this is the portal’s “source room”. Generally it doesn’t matter which you choose as the source room. The portal normal (the arrow in the gizmo) should face outward from the source room.

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Do not be confused by the arrow. Although the arrow shows which direction the portal faces, most portals will be two-way, and can be seen through from both directions. The arrow is more important for ensuring that the portal links to the correct neighbouring room.

Portal linking

There are two options for dealing with specifying which room the portal should link to.

  • Leave the Linked Room in the inspector blank. The system will attempt to autolink the portal to the nearest neighbour room during conversion. This works fine in most cases.

  • You can explicitly specify the room by setting the Linked Room in the inspector.

Note

Portals are defined as a set of 2D points. This ensures that the polygon formed is in a single plane. The transform determines the portal orientation. The points must also form a convex polygon. This is enforced by validating the points you specify, ignoring any that do not form a convex shape. This makes editing easier while making it difficult to break the system.

Trying it out

By now you should be able to create a couple of rooms, add some nodes such as MeshInstances within the rooms, and add a portal between the rooms. Try converting the rooms in the editor, and see if you can now see the objects in neighbouring rooms, through the portal.

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You have now mastered the basic principles of the system.

The next step is to look at the different types of objects that can be managed by the system.