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Sonic X; Sonic Adventure 2; Sonic und die Geheimen Ringe; Sonic Underground; Sonic the Hedgehog (Computerspielfigur) Sonic the Hedgehog; Sonic & Knuckles; Sonic & Sega All-Stars Racing; Sonic der irre Igel; Sonic Colours; Mario & Sonic bei den Olympischen Spielen; Miles Tails Prower; Figuren aus der Sonic-the-Hedgehog-Reihe; Sonic the Hedgehog ...
In computer graphics, a sprite is a two-dimensional bitmap that is integrated into a larger scene, most often in a 2D video game. Originally, the term sprite referred to fixed-sized objects composited together, by hardware, with a background. [1] Use of the term has since become more general.
The visuals were designed to resemble CG imagery; the Sonic sprite on the title screen was based on a Sonic figurine by Taku Makino that the team photographed and scanned. [14] Sonic CD marks the debuts of Amy Rose and Metal Sonic, both designed by Hoshino. Although Hoshino created Amy's in-game graphics, many staff members contributed ideas to ...
Download QR code; In other projects Appearance. move to sidebar hide. File; File history; File usage; Global file usage ... Sonic: Licensing. Public domain Public ...
Media in category "Images that should have transparent backgrounds" The following 105 files are in this category, out of 105 total. 111th Battle For The Bell.jpeg 370 × 208; 33 KB
Naka originally intended to make Nights into Dreams a slow-paced game, but as development progressed the gameplay pace gradually increased, in similar vein to Sonic games. [24] The initial concept envisioned the flying character in a rendered 2D sprite art, with side-scrolling features similar to Sonic the Hedgehog. [26]
Texture Atlas Whitepaper - A whitepaper by NVIDIA which explains the technique.; Practical Texture Atlases - A guide on using a texture atlas (and the pros and cons).; A thousand ways to pack the bin - Review and benchmark of the different packing algorithms
The 1998 webcomic Neglected Mario Characters was the first sprite comic to appear on the internet, [1] though Bob and George was the first sprite comic to gain widespread popularity. Starting its run in 2000, Bob and George utilizes sprites from the Mega Man series of games, with most of the characters being taken directly from the games.