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  2. Nonlinear gameplay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonlinear_gameplay

    For example, a nonlinear game may permit multiple sequences to finish the game, a choice between paths to victory, different types of victory, or optional side-quests and subplots. Some games feature both linear and nonlinear elements, and some games offer a sandbox mode that allows players to explore an open world game environment ...

  3. Zero Latency (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero_Latency_(company)

    Free-roam virtual reality allows users to move freely in an open space and not be constrained by cables and other immobile equipment. [17] Perceptual tricks such as "Change Blindness Redirection" are used in free-roam virtual reality to create the illusion of a virtual environment larger than what is physically available. [ 17 ]

  4. Open world - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_world

    Inverse provides some early examples games that established elements of the open world: Jet Rocket, a 1970 Sega electro-mechanical arcade game that, while not a video game, predated the flight simulator genre to give the player free roaming capabilities, and dnd, a 1975 text-based adventure game for the PLATO system that offered non-linear ...

  5. Pendulum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pendulum

    Pendulums (unlike, for example, quartz crystals) have a low enough Q that the disturbance caused by the impulses to keep them moving is generally the limiting factor on their timekeeping accuracy. Therefore, the design of the escapement , the mechanism that provides these impulses, has a large effect on the accuracy of a clock pendulum.

  6. Game physics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_physics

    Game physics vary greatly in their degree of similarity to real-world physics. Sometimes, the physics of a game may be designed to mimic the physics of the real world as accurately as is feasible, in order to appear realistic to the player or observer. In other cases, games may intentionally deviate from actual physics for gameplay purposes.

  7. Double pendulum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_pendulum

    A double pendulum consists of two pendulums attached end to end.. In physics and mathematics, in the area of dynamical systems, a double pendulum, also known as a chaotic pendulum, is a pendulum with another pendulum attached to its end, forming a simple physical system that exhibits rich dynamic behavior with a strong sensitivity to initial conditions. [1]

  8. Wilberforce pendulum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilberforce_pendulum

    A Wilberforce pendulum, invented by British physicist Lionel Robert Wilberforce around 1896, [1] consists of a mass suspended by a long helical spring and free to turn on its vertical axis, twisting the spring. It is an example of a coupled mechanical oscillator, often used as a demonstration in physics education.

  9. Inverted pendulum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_pendulum

    In both, (the cart and rotating system) the inverted pendulum can fall only in a plane. The inverted pendulums in these projects can either be required to maintain balance only after an equilibrium position is achieved, or can achieve equilibrium by itself. Another platform is a two-wheeled balancing inverted pendulum.