alt.hn

2/3/2026 at 6:26:01 AM

Plasma Effect (2016)

https://www.4rknova.com/blog/2016/11/01/plasma

by todsacerdoti

2/6/2026 at 10:38:58 AM

All I hear is the music from Second Reality (the plasma cube part).

https://youtu.be/iw17c70uJes?si=_KWmUg608NxgyrXv&t=348

by tuzemec

2/6/2026 at 3:30:40 PM

Every once in a while, at random times in life, I hear "I am not an atomic playboy" in my head.

by Zaskoda

2/6/2026 at 3:14:25 PM

I wonder what would happen to that music style if you went 16-bit/44.1 kHz with the samples. Has something like this been tried?

I assume the 'grunginess' is a big part of what makes it work, but I'm also curious.

by lysace

2/6/2026 at 12:46:02 PM

As someone who has seen this effect before, but was unclear how it was done, this article is very "and now draw the rest of the owl". They define a basic equation, it's about what I expected, but the end shader code doesn't use it in that form, and I found it pretty difficult to parse, I can't say I'm much better off in the end.

by aquova

2/7/2026 at 1:33:05 AM

Try https://www.shadertoy.com/view/tftfzj

Isolate each of the additive sine functions by commenting out all but one and view the different elements. Sine wave left to right, Sine wave up to down, Sine wave diagonal, Sine wave circular - and then observe the resulting pattern is just the sum of the atomic parts. Play with it to learn.

by djmips

2/6/2026 at 8:09:59 PM

The article sums up quite well which principles are at play here. The fun part it's suggesting (without words), is either to pick it apart and see what each part does, play around with the constants in there, or start from scratch and roll your own... (all with the Shadertoy linked below the article maybe?)

I would say most interesting texts (articles, books, school, ...) should leave stuff up to the reader's mind to figure out. That's how someone really learns. Versus pre-baked stuff like television etc.

If something does not resonate at first that's pretty normal. You could still take it apart and start investigating words or concepts that ring no bell, for example: waves, interference, demoscene, owls, Feynman.

Enjoy! ;)

by kbr2000

2/6/2026 at 12:50:50 PM

What I usually do in 2026 is copy the code and article and have Claude clarify the unclear parts for me. then is ok.

by larodi

2/6/2026 at 1:53:04 PM

But that's sort of the author's job: if they wish to publish an article on a topic, they should make it both comprehensive and comprehensible.

by MonkeyClub

2/6/2026 at 7:50:50 PM

It’s early February. Have you really read so many articles you couldn’t understand in one month that you have a “usual” way of dealing with it? You should consider whether you would benefit from curating your sources better, or if use of AI as a crutch has already decayed your ability to understand stuff on your own unrecoverably…

by addaon

2/6/2026 at 1:16:45 PM

Love seeing plasma explained again. It’s wild how a few sines and cosines can still look this organic decades later. Feels very demoscene-pure: simple math, clever color mapping, and suddenly you’ve got motion and depth. Also cool to see specular highlights layered on top, old tricks, modern hardware.

by Noubelssy55

2/6/2026 at 10:49:33 AM

Plasma-Pong was a great game

by SeriousM

2/6/2026 at 10:20:40 AM

Specular is a cool addition!

by Sharlin

2/6/2026 at 12:20:04 PM

Loved the intro but that code sample could've used proper variable names.

by Subdivide8452

2/6/2026 at 1:27:24 PM

Would have been awesome if there was step by step visualization where simple color transforms slowly upgraded until you get final result for easier understanding of what each thing is doing.

Otherwise quite hard to visualize changes in you head.

by Ronsenshi

2/6/2026 at 3:02:14 PM

Exactly. Like someone stated, it was a bit like "draw the rest of the fucking owl"

by Subdivide8452